Claude Ollier

French writer

Claude Ollier (French: [klod ɔlje]; 17 December 1922 – 18 October 2014) was a French writer closely associated with the nouveau roman literary movement.[1] Born in Paris, he was the first winner of the Prix Médicis which he received for his novel La Mise en scène.[2]

Ollier died on 18 October 2014, according to his publisher. He was 91.[3]

Works

  • La Mise en scène (1958)
  • Le Maintien de l'ordre (Law and Order) (1961)
  • Eté indien (1963)
  • L'Échec de Nolan (1967)
  • Navettes (1967)
  • La Vie sur Epsilon (1972)
  • Marrakch Medine (1980)
  • Une histoire illisible (1986)
  • Déconnection (Disconnection) (1988)
  • Feuilleton (1990)
  • Du fond des âges (1991)
  • Truquage en amont (1992)
  • Outback ou l'arrière-monde (1995)
  • Cité de mémoire (1996)
  • Aberration (1997)
  • Des événements entre œil et toile (1997)
  • Missing (1998)
  • Obscuration (1999)
  • Wanderlust et les Oxycèdres (2000)
  • Quartz (2000)
  • Préhistoire (2001)
  • Navettes (2002)
  • Niellures (2002)
  • Réminiscence (1980–1990) (2003)
  • Qatastrophe (2004)
  • Wert et la vie sans fin (Wert and the Life Without End) (2007)
  • Cahier des fleurs et des fracas (2009)
  • Hors-Champ (2009)
  • Simulacre (2011)
  • Cinq contes fantastiques (2013)

References

  1. ^ Larousse.fr "Claude Ollier" at Larousse.fr
  2. ^ "Mort de l'écrivain Claude Ollier" (in French). la-croix.com. 20 October 2014.
  3. ^ Claude Ollier (1922–2014), écrivain (in French)

External links

  • Biography and bibliography (in French)
  • A Conversation with Claude Ollier[dead link]
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Laureates of the Prix Médicis
1958–1975
  • 1958: Claude Ollier
  • 1959: Claude Mauriac
  • 1960: Henri Thomas
  • 1961: Philippe Sollers
  • 1962: Colette Audry
  • 1963: Gérard Jarlot
  • 1964: Monique Wittig
  • 1965: René-Victor Pilhes
  • 1966: Marie-Claire Blais
  • 1967: Claude Simon
  • 1968: Elie Wiesel
  • 1969: Hélène Cixous
  • 1970: Camille Bourniquel
  • 1971: Pascal Lainé
  • 1972: Maurice Clavel
  • 1973: Tony Duvert
  • 1974: Dominique Fernandez
  • 1975: Jacques Almira
1976–20002001–present
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