October 09, 2008
French Writer Wins Nobel Prize
Alan Cowell in the New York Times:
The Swedish Academy on Thursday awarded the 2008 Nobel Prize for literature to Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clézio, a cosmopolitan and prolific French novelist, children’s author and essayist regarded by many French readers and critics as one of the country’s greatest living writers.
Mr. Le Clézio has written more than 40 books, 12 of which have been translated into English, an exotic canon of novels, essays and children’s books depicted by the academy as distilled from experience in Mexico, Central America and North Africa and suffused with a quest for lost culture and new spiritual realities.
In its citation, the prize committee in Stockholm called him an “author of new departures, poetic adventure and sensual ecstasy, explorer of a humanity beyond and below the reigning civilization.” The prize, won last year by the British author Doris Lessing, was worth $1.43 million.
More here.
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Comments
I was rooting for Adonis. Maybe he'll be the winner next year. He is overdue.
Posted by: Shehla Anjum | Oct 9, 2008 8:51:43 PM
I remember this guy from Paris in the 70's. He was then an extremely tedious, trite, wordy and great-looking writer. Lots of French people are surprised today. I think this selection owes to anti-American sentiment in the Karolinska Institute -- if not in all of Europe. If so, then choosing Le Clezio, who belongs to a type of writer the US does not produce, makes the Continental point nicely. Anybody read him?
Posted by: Elatia Harris | Oct 10, 2008 12:35:43 AM
Until now, I hadn't even heard of him.
Posted by: ghostman | Oct 10, 2008 1:40:36 AM
Hey is quite a writer.
-fromthedeskofalex.blogspot.com
Posted by: alex | Oct 10, 2008 2:20:43 AM
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