Jean-Jacques Schuhl
Jean-Jacques Schuhl (born October 9, 1941 in Marseille) is a French author, recipient of the 2000 Prix Goncourt literary award for his novel Ingrid Caven. The book is named for the German actress and singer Ingrid Caven, whom Schuhl lives with. Despite appearances, the novel is not her biography.[1]
Works
- Rose Poussière (1972)
- Télex N° 1 (1972)
- Ingrid Caven (2000)
- Entrée des fantômes, Paris, Gallimard, coll. « L'Infini » (2010)
- Obsessions (nouvelles), Paris, Gallimard, coll. « L'Infini » (2014)
gollark: I'm still digging out the tunnels, but once that's done wiring them should be easy enough.
gollark: Ten Metre Island, right?
gollark: Oh, we have lapis issues too, it's why the slag machine is so slow.
gollark: I got 4 diamonds one time, then the TBM ran out of fuel and I left.
gollark: Yes.
References
- "Gary Indiana. - reviews". Art Forum. Archived from the original on 2009-12-28.
External links
- Excerpt from Ingrid Caven
- Forgotten author hits big time with his lover's story Article on Schuhl winning the Prix Goncourt by Stuart Jeffries in The Guardian
- Article in French
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