© Francesca Mantovani. ½Editions GallimardPascal Quignard
Invitado de Honor
Pascal Quignard was born in Verneuil-sur-Avre, Eure, in 1948 and lives in Paris. He is considered one of the greatest contemporary French writers. He is the author of more than 70 books, including the novels Le salon du Wurtemberg (1986), Tous les matins du monde (1991, adapted to the cinema by Alain Courneau), Terrasse à Rome (2000, Grand prix du roman de l'Académie française), Villa Amalia (2006, Grand prix Jean Giono), Les Ombres errantes (2002, Prix Goncourt), Les solidarités mystérieuses (2011), Les larmes (2016) and L'amour la mer (2022). He has also written numerous essays in which fiction is mixed with reflection, such as the Petits traités, and the volumes of Dernier royaume. For his entire works, Pascal Quignard was awarded in 2019 the Marguerite Yourcenar Prize and in 2023 the Prix de la Bibliothèque nationale de France and the Premio Formentor.
For his contribution to the influence of arts and letters in France and around the world, Pascal Quignard has received the highest French honours: in 1995 he was made « chevalier » (« knight »), puis en 2012 « officier » (« officer) of the Legion of Honor, and in 2016 « commandeur » (« commander ») of the Order of Arts and Letters.
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Books and letters to promote dialogue