04 Jan 2011 23:49:10
Patrick Poivre d'Arvor, a household name in France for the past three decades, was accused by L'Express magazine of lifting around 100 pages from a previous biography of the late US novelist.
The weekly's website said PPDA, as he is popularly known in France, cut and pasted swathes of text from a 1985 book by US author Peter Griffin -- later translated into French --- and passed them off as his own by changing them slightly.
Poivre d'Arvor's book on Hemingway, who penned such classics as "For Whom the Bell Tolls", "A Farewell to Arms" and "The Old Man and the Sea", is due in bookstores on January 19.
The journalist, who did not immediately respond to calls from AFP on Tuesday, told L'Express that he had consulted Griffin's book as part of his research but denied plagiarism.
He was exposed in 1991 for using press conference footage and, interposing his own questions, pretending it was his own "exclusive" interview with Castro.
The weekly's website said PPDA, as he is popularly known in France, cut and pasted swathes of text from a 1985 book by US author Peter Griffin -- later translated into French --- and passed them off as his own by changing them slightly.
Poivre d'Arvor's book on Hemingway, who penned such classics as "For Whom the Bell Tolls", "A Farewell to Arms" and "The Old Man and the Sea", is due in bookstores on January 19.
The journalist, who did not immediately respond to calls from AFP on Tuesday, told L'Express that he had consulted Griffin's book as part of his research but denied plagiarism.
He was exposed in 1991 for using press conference footage and, interposing his own questions, pretending it was his own "exclusive" interview with Castro.