Lydie Salvayre

Lydie Salvayre (born Lydie Arjona in 1948) is a French writer. Born in the south of France to Republican refugees from the Spanish Civil War, she went on to study medicine in Toulouse and continues to work as a practicing psychiatrist.[1]

Lydie Salvayre
Lydie Salvayre at the 2019 Geneva book fair
Born5 September 1948  (age 72)
Autainville 
WorksPas pleurer 
Awards
  • Prix Goncourt (Pas pleurer, 2014)
  • Commandeur des Arts et des Lettres‎ (2015) 

She has been awarded the Prix Hermes, the Prix Décembre[2] for her work, and the 2014 Prix Goncourt for Pas pleurer.[3]

Works

  • La Déclaration (1990)
  • La Vie commune (1991) - translated into English as Everyday Life (Dalkey Archive Press 2006)
  • La Médaille (1993) - translated into English as The Award (Four Walls Eight Windows 1997)
  • La Puissance des mouches (1995) - translated into English as The Power of Flies (Dalkey Archive Press 2007)
  • La Compagnie des spectres (1997) - translated into English as The Company of Ghosts (Dalkey Archive Press 2006)
  • Quelques conseils aux élèves huissiers (1997)
  • La Conférence de Cintegabelle (1999) - translated into English as The Lecture (Dalkey Archive Press 2005)
  • Les Belles âmes (2000)
  • Le Vif du vivant (2001)
  • Et que les vers mangent le bœuf mort (2002)
  • Contre (2002)
  • Passage à l'ennemie (2003)
  • La méthode Mila (2005)
  • Dis pas ça (2006)
  • Lumières sur la CCAS. Les activités sociales des salariés de l'énergie (2006, collective work)
  • Portrait de l'écrivain en animal domestique (2007)
  • Petit traité d'éducation lubrique (2008)
  • BW (2009)
  • Hymne (2011)
  • 7 femmes (2013)
  • Pas pleurer (2014, Prix Goncourt); published in English in 2016 by MacLehose Press as Cry, Mother Spain (translated by Ben Faccini).
  • Marcher jusqu'au soir (2019)

Decorations

References

  1. Blandin, Noel (20 August 2009). "Biographie : Qui est Lydie Salvayre ?". La République des Lettres. Retrieved 14 January 2011.
  2. "Prix Décembre". Prix Littéraires. Retrieved 14 January 2011.
  3. Kim Willsher (5 November 2014). "Former psychiatrist Lydie Salvayre wins Prix Goncourt". The Guardian. Retrieved November 5, 2014.
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-09-23. Retrieved 2016-01-14.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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