Charles Guillaume Livet (24 January 1856 â€" 16 April 1919) was a
French playwright, journalist, novelist and physician.A student in
hospitals and journalist[1] with L’Événement, Le Temps, Gil Blas,
the Voltaire (1883-1891) or, among others, the Journal (1892), he
graduated Doctor of Medicine (Paris, 1896) and was distinguished for
his research on cancer by applying calcium carbide fragments on
cancerous parts and obtained the cessation of pain and bleeding.[2]As
a writer, we owe him theatre plays and romance novels, then, during
the First World War, novels about the trenches.[3]
French playwright, journalist, novelist and physician.A student in
hospitals and journalist[1] with L’Événement, Le Temps, Gil Blas,
the Voltaire (1883-1891) or, among others, the Journal (1892), he
graduated Doctor of Medicine (Paris, 1896) and was distinguished for
his research on cancer by applying calcium carbide fragments on
cancerous parts and obtained the cessation of pain and bleeding.[2]As
a writer, we owe him theatre plays and romance novels, then, during
the First World War, novels about the trenches.[3]
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