Activism
With his friends Alain Guel and the protest singer Glenmor, he founded editions Kelenn, where he published Barde imaginé (1968), Keltia Blues (1971), La fête de la nuit (1972) and Rires et pleurs de l'Aven (1978). Alain Guel, who followed his first steps in literature, and with whom he maintained a voluminous correspondence, was one of his best friends, whose support and friendship continued until the end of his life.
Reconnecting with his past as a columnist, he published Le Cheval couché (the lounging horse), a scathing response to Pierre-Jakez Hélias's popular autobiographical novel Cheval d'orgueil (Horse of Pride), which he called "fossilized folkism". He also vilified earlier Breton poets and singers, notably Theodore Botrel, who he described as the creator of a "pitiable" image of Brittany born "from the depths of his idiocy". He later expressed regret for having written the book.
Grall continued to work from a distance for Le Monde and La Vie catholique. He published pamphlets and occasional pieces; le billet d'Olivier presented his passions and his moods on current topics. He also wrote essays on François Mauriac, James Dean and others.
In the early 1970s, he founded the Breton separatist newspaper le Nation bretonne with Alain Guel and Glenmor, where he published lyrics under the pseudonym of "Saint HERBOTS", among others.
He died in Quimperlé in 1981.
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