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Patrick Modiano

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Patrick Modiano
Modiano in Stockholm during the Swedish Academy's press conference, Dec 2014
Modiano in Stockholm during theSwedish Academy's press conference, Dec 2014
BornJean Patrick Modiano
(1945-07-30)30 July 1945 (age 80)
Boulogne-Billancourt, France
OccupationNovelist
LanguageFrench
NationalityFrance
GenreNovels
Notable awardsGrand Prix du roman de l'Académie française (1972)
Prix Goncourt (1978)
Prix mondial Cino Del Duca (2010)
Austrian State Prize for European Literature (2012)
Nobel Prize in Literature (2014)
SpouseDominique Zehrfuss
ChildrenZina Modiano
Marie Modiano

Jean Patrick Modiano (French: [ʒɑ̃ patʁik mɔdjano]; born 30 July 1945), generally known asPatrick Modiano, is aFrenchnovelist. He won the 2014Nobel Prize in Literature. He is known forRue des boutiques obscures.[1]

References

[change |change source]
  1. Bas Wohlert, Camille (9 October 2014)."Patrick Modiano of France wins Nobel Literature Prize".The Rappler. Retrieved9 October 2014.[permanent dead link]
1901 – 1925

Prudhomme (1901) ·Mommsen (1902) ·Bjørnson (1903) ·F. Mistral /Echegaray (1904) ·Sienkiewicz (1905) ·Carducci (1906) ·Kipling (1907) ·Eucken (1908) ·Lagerlöf (1909) ·Heyse (1910) ·Maeterlinck (1911) ·Hauptmann (1912) ·Tagore (1913) ·No award (1914) ·Rolland (1915) ·Heidenstam (1916) ·Gjellerup /Pontoppidan (1917) ·No award (1918) ·Spitteler (1919) ·Hamsun (1920) ·France (1921) ·Benavente (1922) ·Yeats (1923) ·Reymont (1924) ·Shaw (1925)

1926 – 1950

Deledda (1926) ·Bergson (1927) ·Undset (1928) ·Mann (1929) ·Lewis (1930) ·Karlfeldt (1931) ·Galsworthy (1932) ·Bunin (1933) ·Pirandello (1934) ·No award (1935) ·O'Neill (1936) ·Martin du Gard (1937) ·Buck (1938) ·Sillanpää (1939) ·No awards (World War II) ·Jensen (1944) ·G. Mistral (1945) ·Hesse (1946) ·Gide (1947) ·Eliot (1948) ·Faulkner (1949) ·Russell (1950)

1951 – 1975

Lagerkvist (1951) ·Mauriac (1952) ·Churchill (1953) ·Hemingway (1954) ·Laxness (1955) ·Jiménez (1956) ·Camus (1957) ·Pasternak (1958) ·Quasimodo (1959) ·Perse (1960) ·Andrić (1961) ·Steinbeck (1962) ·Seferis (1963) ·Sartre (1964) ·Sholokhov (1965) ·Agnon /Sachs (1966) ·Asturias (1967) ·Kawabata (1968) ·Beckett (1969) ·Solzhenitsyn (1970) ·Neruda (1971) ·Böll (1972) ·White (1973) ·Johnson /Martinson (1974) ·Montale (1975)

1976 – 2000

Bellow (1976) ·Aleixandre (1977) ·Singer (1978) ·Elytis (1979) ·Miłosz (1980) ·Canetti (1981) ·García Márquez (1982) ·Golding (1983) ·Seifert (1984) ·Simon (1985) ·Soyinka (1986) ·Brodsky (1987) ·Mahfouz (1988) ·Cela (1989) ·Paz (1990) ·Gordimer (1991) ·Walcott (1992) ·Morrison (1993) ·Ōe (1994) ·Heaney (1995) ·Szymborska (1996) ·Fo (1997) ·Saramago (1998) ·Grass (1999) ·Gao (2000)

2001 – present

Naipaul (2001) ·Kertész (2002) ·Coetzee (2003) ·Jelinek (2004) ·Pinter (2005) ·Pamuk (2006) ·Lessing (2007) ·Le Clézio (2008) ·Müller (2009) ·Vargas Llosa (2010) ·Tranströmer (2011) ·Mo (2012) ·Munro (2013) ·Modiano (2014) ·Alexievich (2015) ·Dylan (2016) ·Ishiguro (2017) ·No formal awardCondé(New Academy Prize) (2018) ·Tokarczuk (2018) ·Handke (2019) ·Glück (2020) ·Gurnah (2021) ·Ernaux (2022) ·Fosse (2023) ·Kang (2024) ·Krasznahorkai (2025)

Laureates of thePrix Goncourt
1903–1925
1926–1950
1951–1975
1976–2000
2001–present


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