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Jean-Noël Pancrazi


Jean-Noël Pancrazi is a French author born in Sétif, Algeria, on April 28, 1949.

Jean-Noël Pancrazi spent the first ten years of his life in Algeria with his parents and his sister. His childhood years during the Algerian war had a significant influence on his literary work,.

He arrived in France in 1962 and went to secondary school in Perpignan, his mother’s birthplace. He went to Paris to study at the famous Lycée Louis-le-Grand then studied literature at the Sorbonne. In 1972 he received a degree in French Language and Literature. His first published work was an essay on Mallarmé published in 1973. During the 1970s he worked as a French professor at a high school in Massy.

His first novel, La Mémoire brûlée came out in 1979 published by Éditions du Seuil. He then wrote Lalibela ou la mort nomade (1981), L'Heure des adieux (1985) and Le Passage des princes (1988).

His following novel, Les Quartiers d'hiver was published in 1990 by Gallimard: the backdrop is « le Vagabond », a gay bar in Paris, at the start of the AIDS epidemic. The novel received the prix Médicis. Pancrazi continued his exploration of nightlife culture with his novel Le Silence des passions (1994) which received the prix Valery Larbaud.

He came back to his childhood in Batna, Algeria, at the time when the country toppled into war in his novel Madame Arnoul (1995), which traces the friendship between a young boy and his Alsatian neighbor – which the narrator considers like another mother – considered “an ally of the Arabs” because she protected a young Algerian girl against an assault by a French soldier, she was subsequently “punished” for this.Madame Arnoul received three awards: the prix du Livre Inter, the prix Maurice-Genevoix, and the prix Albert-Camus.

He pays homage to his father, who lived in Corsica at the end of his life, in the novel Long séjour (1998, which received the award Jean Freustié), then to his mother in the novel Renée Camps (2001). These three books compose “a trilogy of family memories”.

In Tout est passé si vite (2003, which received the Grand prix du roman de l'Académie française), he paints the portrait of a close friend who is an editor and writer who is diagnosed with cancer.


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