Pierre Boulle
Pierre Boulle was born in Avignon, France in 1912. He originally trained as an engineer, but in 1936 went to Malaysia as a rubber planter. In 1939 he was called up in the French forces in Indochina. When France fell during World War II, he fled to Singapore, where he joined the Free French Mission. After the Japanese invasion, he was sent via Rangoon and the Burma Road to Yunnan to establish contact with Kuomintang forces. He infiltrated Indochina as a guerilla where he was captured in 1943. He...See more
Pierre Boulle was born in Avignon, France in 1912. He originally trained as an engineer, but in 1936 went to Malaysia as a rubber planter. In 1939 he was called up in the French forces in Indochina. When France fell during World War II, he fled to Singapore, where he joined the Free French Mission. After the Japanese invasion, he was sent via Rangoon and the Burma Road to Yunnan to establish contact with Kuomintang forces. He infiltrated Indochina as a guerilla where he was captured in 1943. He escaped in 1944, was picked up by a British plane, and served in the Special Forces in Calcutta for the rest of the war. His first novel published in the United States was "The Bridge on the River Kwai," It was awarded the Prix Ste. Beuve in France, and led to the motion picture that received an amazing seven Academy Awards. He considered his subsequent books, of which "Planet of the Apes" is the most well-known, to be social fantasies. See less
Pierre Boulle's Featured Books
Pierre Boulle book reviews
-
The Bridge on the River Kwai
Classic war novel
by Louis V, Sep 20, 2012
While Boulle's novel is very (very!) loosely based on the true World War II events of the building and destruction of the River Kwai Bridge, it is still entertaining. Read the novel and then read the ... Read More
-
Planet of the Apes
Powerful
by Selina, Oct 11, 2007
The apes can drive and fly planes in this civilized soceity. A reporter who is on assignment with his astronaut buddies ends up on this strange planet. He can only speak French, which the apes ... Read More