Yann Queffélec

Yann Queffélec (born September 4, 1949 in Paris)[1] is a French author who won the Prix Goncourt in 1985 for his novel Les Noces barbares, translated into English as The Wedding.[2][3] He is the former husband of the late pianist Brigitte Engerer[4] and the brother of musician Anne Queffélec.[5] Their father was the writer Henri Queffélec.

Yann Queffélec
Yann Queféllec (2013)
Born (1949-09-04) September 4, 1949
Paris
NationalityFrench
OccupationAuthor
Known forWinner of Prix Goncourt
Notable work
Les Noces barbares (1984)
Partner(s)Brigitte Engerer
RelativesAnne Queffélec
AwardsPrix Goncourt in 1985

Partial bibliography

  • Les Noces barbares (1984)
  • Osmose (2000)[6]
  • The Sea (2003): coauthor with photographer Philip Plisson and Eliane Georges.[7]
gollark: Great. Go kill basically all AI researchers.
gollark: This has been done.
gollark: So none are safe, and you cannot possibly hope to escape.
gollark: Unfortunately, nobody knows what ideal human morals are - or, well, everyone knows different ones - and they'd be hard to implement anyway.
gollark: That will* work.

References

  1. "J'ai tout pour plaire et tout pour déplaire". Evene.fr.
  2. Stuewe, Paul (9 December 1989). "Always willing to take on the powers that be". Toronto Star.
  3. Bernstein, Richard (1 May 1985). "Is it passé to be enagé?". New York Times.
  4. Lamy, Jean-Claud (31 July 2008). "Yann Queffélec: une gueule d'écrivain" (in French). Le Figaro.
  5. "Yann Queffélec "Bartók est un peu Breton"". Nantes: Maville. 3 February 2007.
  6. Daniell, Steven (22 March 2001). "Osmose. (Fiction).(Review)". World Literature Today.
  7. Bowles, Philip (1 February 2003). "Article: Portrait of the sea". Geographical. Archived from the original on 2 November 2012.


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