Showing posts with label Grannec. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grannec. Show all posts

Tuesday, 10 July 2012

Livres Hebdo on the forthcoming French literary season

In its feature article on the forthcoming Fall's literary season, the French professional magazine of the book industry Livres Hebdo examines the literary trends and topics that have emerged from the 600+ titles soon to be published (Livres Hebdo number 916, June 29 2012, pp. 82-87):

With its traditionally generational novels, its questioning on the couple, its dive into family affairs and its mise-en-abîme of the creation or retranscription of social reality, the 2012 production presents all the great themes that spice up a literary season by analysing our society. Indeed, French fiction is getting more and more irrigated by reality and is trying to tell our contemporary world. Several novels yet distance themselves thanks to the originality of their themes.

 
Livres Hebdo further identifies that:

Writers use fiction to slide into the lives of historical figures or to take over unknown characters.

Agence de l’Est will be concentrating on offering titles in the latter category, novels that present the extraordinary lives and grey areas of historical figures:


The story as seen from the eyes of Drypteis, Hephaestion’s widow, who accompanies Alexander the Great’s body after his death, and of the generals who fight over Alexander's body to take his place.
Warning: this is not a historic novel; this is the continuation of a legend, retelling Drypteis’ story at the time in which she disappears from known history.


 
The life and work of the great Czech mathematician Kurt Gödel, as told by his wife Adele years after his death to a young academic, Anna, whose life will be changed in the process. The epic life of a genius who never learned how to live, and of a woman who only knew how to love.
It is already expected to be one of this Fall’s biggest hits, as said in this article from the French daily Le Figaro last week.


The pilot of one of the meteorological reconnaissance planes which led the way of the atomic bomber towards Hiroshima on August 6, 1945.




At the end of his life, while preparing one of his last exhibitions, Jean Siméon Chardin unveils himself in a moving letter to his son.




 




 
Another noticeable trend that Livres Hebdo highlights is that:

It is also what happened during the past year that finds an echo in the imagination of this literary season’s authors.

 
The following is an example taken from the article:

The international turmoil can be found in Mathias Énard’s novel; the specialist of the Arabic world and of the Middle-East wondered through the characters of RUE DES VOLEURS what it meant to be twenty years old in the times of the Arab Spring.


 


The last part of the article deals with those novelists who have written theatre plays:

The stage is the novelist’s new territory. Four plays written by novelists will be both published and staged in the Fall.


Livres Hebdo focuses on four of them: Emmanuelle Pireyre, Amanda Sthers, Laurent Seksik and Laurent Mauvignier.


As far as debuts are concerned (69 first novels are to be published between the end of August and October):

These novelists’ favourite subjects are family, insanity, culture and new technologies as agents of the transformation of society.

 
Agence de l’Est offers some of them:

Before killing herself, Hélène leaves her ten-year-old son in Pierrot’s care. At first he hesitates, confronted by such an unexpected responsibility; but his group of friends do their best to help him raise the child. What follows brings Pierrot to finally believe in happiness.





 
The touching story of a family of puppetteers' journey across Europe spanning three generations, between the 19th and 20th centuries. A story that speaks for all those who struggle with the passing times and our ever-changing world.



 

 
And last but not least:

The prize of the longest novel will no doubt be awarded to Sylvie Taussig’s 1,776 pages of DANS LES PLIS SINUEUX DES VIEILLES CAPITALES, published by Galaade.


Sylvie Taussig

On Culturebox, the blog owned by francetv.fr, the website of the group of national TV channels France Télévisions, Anne Brigaudeau writes:

The longest novel of the literary season, DANS LES PLIS SINEUX DES VIEILLES CAPITALES by Sylvie Taussig, is published by a small publishing house of quality, Galaade.

How do they justify such a courageous choice? “We’ve had this novel for five years, says the publishing house. This is a monstrous piece of work where everything converges and a very original style.”

Born in 1969, the author is the translator of the philosopher Hannah Arendt’s works and a researcher at the Centre National d’Etudes Scientifiques (CNRS). Galaade sends to lazy critics an exciting “booklet with the synopsis included” that gives you the itch to dive into this sprawling novel on Paris, a worldly and thousand-year-old city.

Thursday, 5 July 2012

Yannick Grannec: LA DEESSE DES PETITES VICTOIRES

 

August 2012, 472 pages


  • German rights just sold to ECOWIN and US rights to OTHER PRESS !  
The life and work of the great mathematician of Czech origin Kurt Gödel, as told by his wife Adele years after his death to a young academic, Anna, whose life will be changed in the process.
            Princeton University, 1980. A young and relatively ambitious librarian named Anna Roth is set the task to get back Kurt Gödel’s records – the most fascinating and impenetrable mathematician of the 20th century. Her mission consists in cajoling and finally taming the great man’s widow, Adele, a notorious shrew who seems to be satisfying a belated desire for revenge on the Establishment by refusing to hand over documents of immeasurable scientific value.
            The very first time they meet, Adele soon discovers Anna’s hidden agenda. Strangely enough, she doesn’t reject her, but the old woman lays down the rule: she knows she is to die soon, and she has got one last story to tell, a story no one was ever willing to listen to. It begins almost like a tale: Once upon a time, there was a simple and happy young girl, a dancer in a cabaret. She fell in love with a young prodigy from a wealthy family who was anything but destined for her...
            From the flamboyant Vienna of the 1930s to post-War Princeton, from the Anschluss to McCarthyism, from the end of the positivist ideal to the advent of the nuclear bomb, Anna discovers the epic life of a genius who never learned how to live, and of a woman who only knew how to love. A moving journey into the life of the loving wife of a great man, and a fascinating panorama of the political and scientific revolutions of the 20th century.
            Yannick Grannec trained as an industrial designer. She currently works as a graphic designer and is a maths enthusiast. LA DÉESSE DES PETITES VICTOIRES is her first novel, and she devoted four years of her life on research and writing.

Monday, 2 July 2012

Advanced information on the forthcoming 2012 literary season in France

In relation to our tweet earlier on today (entitled "For French speakers : premières infos sur la rentrée littéraire 2012 : " @AgDelEst)

Here is the translation of a few excerpts of the article from national daily Le Figaro on the forthcoming 2012 literary season in France:

“According to the professional magazine of the French publishing world, Livres Hebdo, 646 French and foreign novels will be published between mid-August and mid-October. A careful literary critic would have to read ten books a day during two months to read them all! On a more serious level, this number shows that the crisis also hurts the publishing world: the 2012 production is inferior to those of 2010 and 2011.


An even stronger sign: less and less first novels are being published. In 2012, only 69 new authors have had the luck to be chosen by the publishing houses; they were 121 in 2004.”

(…)

The article mentions the forthcoming novel of Laurent Gaudé (Prix Goncourt 2004) :

POUR SEUL CORTEGE by Laurent Gaudé: Alexander the Great is going to die. To succeed him, the empire needs a man who is conducted by the same spirit of conquest…

(…)

The article mentions a first novel that we are most proud to represent :

“Another novel which is likely to be a success: LA DEESSE DES PETITES VICTOIRES, written by a young woman, Yannick Grannec. The synopsis: in 1980 at the University of Princeton, the librarian Anna Roth is given the responsibility of recovering the archives of the mathematician Kurt Gödel. She has to tame the nagging widow who, above all expectations, does not reject her but sets rules. Aware that she will soon die, she is even willing to tell a story that no one has ever wanted to hear.
This presentation has already seduced Pocket [a major mass-market paperback publisher in France], which is said to have paid a lot…”