In these blatant accounts, Drieu la Rochelle exposes with all rawness and not without irony the ideological confusion that suffered many Europeans of his generation. Pierre Drieu la Rochelle (Paris, 1893) had a difficult childhood because of the disunion of his parents, which marked his future relationship with women and marriage, although it did not prevent him from having multiple affairs and marrying (and divorcing) twice . Drieu fought in World War I, wrote poems and stories that were well received and related to the surrealists. He published numerous works of fiction (Le feu follet, 1931, Gilles, 1939, Les mémoires de Dirk Raspe, postuma), essays and articles with autobiographical resonances in which analyzes the political, sexual and moral uprooting of his generation, traumatized by the war . Increasingly concerned about European politics, he adopts a fascist ideology. When the ...read more