Laurence Cossé

Laurence Cossé (born 1950 in Boulogne-Billancourt, France) is a French writer, who published mainly novels.[1]

Laurence Cossé (2018)

She was first a journalist in the French newspaper Le Quotidien de Paris and then at the French public radio France Culture. Most of her novels were published by the French publishing house Gallimard. Her most famous novel to date, Le Coin du voile (1996), was translated as A Corner of the veil in American English (as well as in five other languages).

Although she published one poetic novel (Les Chambres du Sud) and one historical novel (La Femme du premier ministre), most of her latest novels evoke the contemporary French society, often in a critical or ironical manner. She received in 2015 the "Grand Prix de littérature" of the Académie Française.[2]

Works

  • Novels
    • Les Chambres du Sud, Gallimard, 1981
    • Le Premier pas d'amante, Gallimard, 1983
    • 18h35 : Grand Bonheur, Le Seuil, 1991
    • Un Frère, Le Seuil, 1994
    • Le Coin du voile, Gallimard, 1996 (received the "Prix du Jury Jean Giono 1996"); American translation by Linda Asher (A corner of the veil)
    • La Femme du premier ministre, Gallimard, 1998
    • Le Mobilier national, Gallimard, 2001
    • Le 31 du mois d'août, Gallimard, 2003; in English Accident in August (Europa Editions, 2011)
    • Au bon roman, Gallimard, 2009 ; in English, A Novel Bookstore (Europa Editions, 2010)
    • Les Amandes amères, Gallimard, 2011; in English, Bitter Almonds (Europa Editions, 2013)
    • La Grande Arche, Gallimard, 2016
  • Short stories
    • Vous n'écrivez plus ?, Gallimard, 2006 (received the "Grand Prix de la nouvelle de l'Académie Française″)
  • Theater
    • La Terre des Folles, published with Monseigneur de Très-Haut, HB éditions, 1995 (with illustrations by Christine Lesueur)
gollark: Currently, yes.
gollark: Donuts are physical objects which obey physical laws, which people make based on the idea of donuts.
gollark: I consider light a physical thing though. You can measure it, it directly impacts physical objects, sort of thing.
gollark: To the extent that things like countries do without physically existing, sure.
gollark: They're *caused by* things in reality, as far as I know they don't actually... have some sort of physical existence outside of being stored/processed in people's brains and computers/paper/other storage.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.