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Gilles Carpentier (14 June 1950, Paris – 16 September 2016[1]) was a French writer and editor


Biography


After various menial jobs at the PTT or in the cinema, then a journalist with the cultural section of Rouge [fr] in the 1970s, where he published numerous chronicles on free jazz, Carpentier also became a reader for the Éditions du Seuil.[1] In charge of the manuscript service and member of its reading committee from 1981, he was a full-fledged publisher in 1992 and until 2003.[1] He discovered Agota Kristof with the novel The Notebook [fr][2] which became a great success in France and also the writer Abdelhak Serhane.[1] He also edited numerous African and Francophone authors including Aimé Césaire (whose complete poetry he edited), Ahmadou Kourouma, Sony Labou Tansi, Kateb Yacine, Kossi Efoui, or Tierno Monenembo.[1][2]

Éditions du Seuil greeted him as an "immense reader and discoverer of talent".[1]

He was also the author of six books, which were all in one way or another about one of his favorite subjects, the contemporary city. His latest novel, Les Bienveillantes [not to be mistaken with J. Littell's eponymous work (2006)] is written in an entirely dialogued form.

Les Manuscrits de la marmotte published in 1984, earned him the Prix Fénéon for literature.


Works



References





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