Pascale Roze

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Pascale Roze (born March 22, 1954 in Saigon ) is a French writer.

Pascale Roze came from a family resident in French Indochina, her father was a naval officer and her mother came from a merchant family that traded in Indochina (her grandfather was mayor of Cholon ). Pascale Roze studied literature and worked with Gabriel Garran from 1983 to 1993 in the municipal theater of Aubervilliers and in his Théâtre international de langue française.

She organized writing schools for children from troubled suburbs and also presented literature on the radio at France-Inter (until 2010, in the program Cosmopolitaine by Paula Jacques).

Her first collection of short stories (influenced by Marguerite Duras ) appeared in 1994 (Histoires dérangées). In 1996 she received the Prix ​​Goncourt for Le Chasseur zéro (The Sound), which also received the Prix ​​du premier roman . The novel begins with a kamikaze attack on a US warship in which a US marine dies. Years later, the daughter, who is now living in Paris with her ailing, mentally unstable mother, goes in search of information about her father. She discovers the diary of a kamikaze flyer and develops a pathological obsession with this topic.

In 1996 she nearly died of an aneurysm. In 1997 she married the writer Claude Delarue (died 2011).

She lives partly in Paris and in Bourgogne.

Fonts

Novels, short stories:

  • Histoires dérangées, recueil de nouvelles, Julliard, 1994
  • Le Chasseur Zéro, Paris: A. Michel, 1996
    • Übers. Irène Kuhn , Ralf Stamm: The noise. Kindler, 1998
  • Ferraille, Albin Michel, 1999 (novel)
  • Lettre d'été, Albin Michel, 2000 (fictional letter to Tolstoy)
  • Parle-moi, Albin Michel, 2003 (novel)
  • Un homme sans larmes, stick (a dialogue with Horace )
  • L'Eau rouge, Gallimard, 2007 (novel, set in the Indochina War)
  • Itsik, Stock, 2008 (novel about a Polish Jew in World War II)
  • Aujourd'hui les cœurs se desserrent, Stock 2011
  • Passage de l'amour, floor 2014
  • Lonely Child 2017

Theatre:

  • Mary contre Mary
  • Tolstoï la Nuit, 1981 (received the Prix Arletty)

Web links