Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Goncourt Prize goes to 'Anomaly' of a novel

-

After being postponed in solidarity with bookshops closed due to France's coronaviru­s lockdown, the coveted literary award has been awarded to author Hervé Le Tellier.

France's prestigiou­s Prix Goncourt goes to author Hervé Le Tellier for his novel L'Anomalie ( The Anomaly), the jury of the Academie Goncourt announced on Monday in Paris.

The story brings together a series of unrelated characters — including a hit man, a Nigerian pop star and a writer — who were all passengers of a ParisNew York flight that occurs... twice.

The book has been described as a "literary UFO" combining different genres, from sciencefic­tion to crime novel, from comedy to romance. It's "a popular adventure, a real pageturner, an imminent bestseller, but also an experiment­al, ultra-literary work," wrote author Frédéric Beigbeder in a review for Le Figaro magazine.

For Le Tellier, his story of parallel universes can be read as a parable forlife after Donald Trump. "The idea is that since Trump is there and is the cause of the world's destructio­n, the vision of the book is to propose another version of the world, where Biden is president," said the Goncourt Prize winner during a video conference on Monday.

Member of an experiment­al literary group

"You never expect a prize like the Goncourt," said Le Tellier. "First of all, you don't write to get it, and then you can't imagine getting it," the author added.

Born on April 21, 1957, Hervé Le Tellier published his first collection of short stories in 1991 and has since written some 20 works. L'Anomalie is his eighth novel.

The author is also the fourth president of the internatio­nal literary group Oulipo, which was founded by Raymond Queneau in 1960 and whose most prominent members include Georges Perec and Italo Calvino.

Prize postponed in reaction to coronaviru­s lockdown

After being closed for a month after France imposed its second nationwide lockdown, French bookshops reopened two days ago.

The fact that independen­t bookstores had been listed as non-essential businesses had caused widespread indignatio­n, especially since large entertainm­ent retail chains selling cultural products were kept open.

Initially set to be awarded on November 10, the Goncourt prize announced ahead of the

lockdown that it would postpone the announceme­nt "in solidarity" with bookseller­s.

While the coveted literary award only comes with €10 ($12) in prize money, it invariably turns the winning book into an internatio­nal bestseller.

Previous winners of the Prix Goncourt, which was set up in 1903, include Marcel Proust, Simone de Beauvoir, Marguerite Duras and Michel Houellebec­q.

eg/ (AFP, dpa)

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The esteemed French literary prize, the Prix Goncourt, was first given out in 1903
The esteemed French literary prize, the Prix Goncourt, was first given out in 1903

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany