View Full Version : Nobel Literature Prize 2014
Marbles
10-09-2014, 10:32 AM
Your thoughts?
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/78109000/jpg/_78109327_modianoafp.jpg
French historical author Patrick Modiano has won the 2014 Nobel Prize for literature.
The Nobel Academy described the novelist, whose work has often focused on the Nazi occupation of France, as "a Marcel Proust of our time".
Modiano beat bookies' favourites Japanese writer Haruki Murakami and Kenyan novelist, poet and playwright Ngugi wa Thiong'o. The last French writer to win the prize was Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clezio in 2008.
The academy said the award was "for the art of memory with which he has evoked the most ungraspable human destinies and uncovered the life-world of the occupation".
"This is someone who has written many books that echo off each other... that are about memory, identity and aspiration," Peter Englund, the academy's permanent secretary said.
Much of the author's work, he said, looked at the Vichy regime in occupied France during World War 2, particularly the part it played in the deportation of Jews to concentration camps..
Full news report here (http://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-29553516).
R.F. Schiller
10-10-2014, 01:02 AM
Never heard of him or read him. "A Marcel Proust of our time" is pretty high praise though. Was pulling for Roth to win.
hannah_arendt
10-10-2014, 02:56 PM
I have never read anything of him. However, I am going to change it.
Marbles
10-11-2014, 11:18 AM
Americans are whining Philip Roth did not get it again. Two important novelists, a Japanese and a Kenyan, were hot favourites and quite well known for their works. They did not get it either. It went to an obscure writer almost all my learned friends hadn't heard of before.
Now, we can expect his translations in many languages of the world and great sales because of the Nobel label.
Interesting, this Nobel business.
Frédéric Moreau
10-11-2014, 01:51 PM
Americans are whining Philip Roth did not get it again. Two important novelists, a Japanese and a Kenyan, were hot favourites and quite well known for their works. They did not get it either. It went to an obscure writer almost all my learned friends hadn't heard of before.
Now, we can expect his translations in many languages of the world and great sales because of the Nobel label.
Interesting, this Nobel business.
Modiano does seem to be a great writer (in Spain he was rather known), despite the fact he is not very much known in the English speaking world, I think his works are not translated into English. I will buy an edition of his works in Spanish and read him before giving an opinion, but I do understand the chagrin of many Americans. There are a lot of great current American writers systematically ignored by the Nobel committee: Roth, De Lillo, Pynchon, Cormac McCarthy, Franzen, etcetera. It just seems that they loathe American culture. And not to mention those great writers from all over the world so unfairly despised by the Swedish academy: Chekhov, Zola, Hardy, Ibsen, Twain, Tolstoi, Conrad, Proust, Joyce, Fitzgerald, Dos Passos, Maugham, Orwell, Borges, Alejo Carpentier, Ernesto Sabato, Nabokov and so many others. As I said before, there is no translation, so you only may read him in French or in Spanish (I don't know whether there are available more translations in other languages).
French;
http://www.amazon.fr/Romans-Patrick-Modiano/dp/2070139565/ref=sr_1_7?ie=UTF8&qid=1413049498&sr=8-7&keywords=Patrick+Modiano
Spanish:
http://www.amazon.es/Trilog%C3%ADa-ocupaci%C3%B3n-estrella-circunvalaci%C3%B3n-narrativas/dp/8433975803/ref=sr_1_2_twi_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1413049245&sr=1-2&keywords=patrick+modiano
Ah, and I almost forget to say that I am glad Murikami did not win it, I think he is preposterously overrated.
desiresjab
10-11-2014, 06:42 PM
Ah, another author that 10 people have read. It seems usually to be someone who wrote about an unpopular political regime. Fellow aspirants, take note.
LeNoirFaineant
10-12-2014, 09:30 AM
A German paper wrote a surprisingly good analysis of the recent developments in European literature:
http://www.spiegel.de/kultur/gesellschaft/literatur-nobelpreis-georg-diez-ueber-patrick-modiano-und-lutz-seiler-a-996462.html
This general turn towards a new intimism profoundly bores me. Granted, the Nobel committee has never rewarded progressivism,
but Modiano, from what I gather, is about as socially explosive as William Somerset Maugham - if you read him today, that is. Not an author that I would normally look out for, I think.
Poetaster
10-12-2014, 11:53 AM
I've never heard of him, I do want to read him now - but not very much.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.2 Copyright © 2026 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.