Find Famous People Fast!

Browse by Name:

Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

Writer / Aviator

Antoine-Marie-Roger de Saint-Exupéry was a French aviator and the author of the children's fable The Little Prince (1943). A veteran of France's air service (1921-23), he spent most of his working life in commercial aviation. He flew postal routes across Spain into Africa -- he survived a 1935 crash in the Sahara -- and flew in Brazil and Argentina for a time. He also wrote novels. Southern Mail (1929), Night Flight (1931) and Wind, Sand and Stars (1939) brought him critical and popular success. He flew for the French at the beginning of World War II, but with Germany's occupation of France Saint-Exupéry relocated to the U.S. and Canada, where he wrote his most famous work, The Little Prince. Despite being a little too old to fly, he joined the Free French and Allied air forces toward the end of World War II. He went on a mission to collect information on German troop movements in the Rhone valley on 31 July 1944 and was never seen again; Saint-Exupéry became France's own Amelia Earhart. His aircraft was discovered in the late 1990s off the coast of Marseilles, but his corpse was missing. Former German ace pilot Horst Rippert claimed in 2008 that he was nearly certain he'd shot down Saint Exupéry in 1944 (Rippert also expressed regret, calling Saint Exupéry one of his favorite authors at the time).

Blog posts mentioning Antoine de Saint-Exupéry:

Four Good Links

Chasing the Sun

PBS feature on his career

Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

The usual good sketch from Books & Writers

Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

Nifty fan tribute, with many related links

Saint-Exupéry's Plane Found

2004 CBS News story, with some background on the tale of his disappearance

Vital Stats

Birth

29 June 1900

Birthplace

Lyon, France

Death

31 July 1944
(airplane crash, age 44)

Best Known As

Author of The Little Prince