Background
Bessière was born and died at Béziers - a year after his death, his home town announced that a street would be named in his honour.
Bessière was born and died at Béziers - a year after his death, his home town announced that a street would be named in his honour.
His œuvre, particularly abundant, was published primarily by publisher Fleuve Noir. Bessière was one of the leading authors of publisher Fleuve Noir"s popular imprints Anticipation and Espionnage. His first science fiction series (1951-1954) featured the Conquérants de l’Universe, a band of Earthmen led by professor Bénac, the inventor of a spaceship called Meteor, who explore the Solar System.
The series began with serious tales of alien or extra-dimensional invasions, but eventually took a satirical turn.
Bessière"s other popular series involved the hard-boiled adventures of Dan Seymour, a futuristic James Bond. Bessière also made his mark on French science fiction through a number of non-connected novels that featured an original blend of horror and science fiction.
Monstrous aliens threatening to take over mankind were featured in Escale chez les Vivants (1960). Evil entities from beyond human ken whose only weakness was sound invaded Earth in Les Maîtres du Silence (1965).
Cette Lueur Qui Venait Des Ténèbres (1967) featured ghastly body-snatching parasites.
The ultimately doomed reconquest of a post-cataclysmic Earth ruled by mutants and deadly lifeforms, was the subject of Légion Alpha (1961), Les September Anneaux de Rhéa (1962), in which Earth was described as seven concentric spheres with Hell at its core, and Les Jardins de l’Apocalypse (1963). Les Marteaux de Vulcain (1969) described a nightmarish planet where survival was all but impossible. Bessière also wrote almost a hundred spy thrillers for the Espionnage imprint of Fleuve Noir under the pseudonym of F.-H. Ribes.
Many of these starred a hero called Gérard Lecomte.