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".BBC reports.
The award
- presented to a living writer - is worth eight million kronor (£691,000).
Previous
winners include literary giants such as Rudyard Kipling, Toni Morrison and
Ernest Hemingway.
At a
press conference in Paris, the publicity-shy Modiano expressed his surprise at
the win and said he was keen to find out why he was chosen.
"I
wasn't expecting it at all," he said. "It was like I was a bit
detached from it all, as if a doppelganger with my name had won."
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.
ANALYSIS
By Henri
Astier, BBC News
Patrick
Modiano has been a national literary treasure in France for decades. But up
until now, he has also been one of the country's best-kept secrets. Only a
handful of his 25-odd novels have been translated into English.
One
reason for this might be that Modiano's storylines are as slim as the books
themselves. They usually centre on young men cast adrift among high-living
crooks in 1960s Paris. There is a sense of threat, but little is explained.
The plot,
however, matters much less than the feelings evoked by his deceptively simple
prose. Blurred memory plays a key role. Modiano's narrators try to make sense
of half-remembered events from their youth, looking back through a glass
darkly.
The lack
of clarity goes hand in hand with geographical precision - with each Paris
location overlaid with layers of imperfect memories. The poetic character of
Modiano's writing may explain why few have ventured to translate him so far.
Hopefully the Nobel Prize will now give him the international recognition he
deserves.
French
Prime Minister Manuel Valls, quoted by Reuters news agency, said Modiano was
"undoubtedly one of the greatest writers" of recent years.
"This
is well-deserved for a writer who is moreover discreet, as is much of his
excellent work."
Modiano,
69, was born in Boulogne-Billancourt, a suburb of Paris, to a businessman
father and an actress mother.
He
studied at Lycee Henri-IV in Paris, where his geometry teacher was Raymond
Queneau, a writer who was to prove a major influence.
Professor
Sean Hand, the head of the School of Languages and Cultures at the University
of Warwick said readers of Modiano "see his work as being concerned with a
number of basic themes about memory, loss, identity and real ambiguities that
are inherent in all of these".
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.
Modiano's
debut novel, La Place de l'Etoile, was published in 1968 but, more than 40
years later, has yet to be translated into English.
Professor
Hand said: "I don't think it was until 2010 that the book was translated
into German.
"The
controversy is that he returned to this period and you could says he's exposing
France's guilt about the Vichy act of participation in the round up and
deportation and extermination of Jews but in doing so, he's also returning to
it, not really to offer a historical critique but more to enter back into this
almost dream-like period of moral suspension."
Many of
Modiano's other works have been translated into English, among them Les
boulevards de ceinture (1972; Ring Roads : A Novel, 1974), Villa Triste (1975;
Villa Triste, 1977), Quartier perdu (1984; A Trace of Malice, 1988) and Voyage
de noces (1990; Honeymoon, 1992).
His most
recent novel is Pour que tu ne te perdes pas dans le quartier (2014).
Modiano
also worked with film director Louis Malle on the screenplay of Lacombe Lucien
(1974), a feature film about a teenage boy during the German occupation of
France.
His sixth
novel, Missing Person (French title: Rue des boutiques obscures), won the
French literary accolade the Prix Goncourt in 1978.
Other
prizes include Grand prix du roman de l'Academie francaise in 1972 and the 2010
prix mondial Cino Del Duca by the Institut de France for lifetime achievement.
In 2012,
he won the Austrian State Prize for European Literature.
A total
111 individuals have been awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature between 1901
and 2014.
Last
year's winner was Canadian author Alice Munro.
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