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Andreï Makine

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Name
  
Andrei Makine

Role
  
Author


Andrei Makine Andrei Makine interview Telegraph

Awards
  
Nominations
  
International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award

Books
  
Dreams of My Russian, The Life of an Unknown, A Life\'s Music, Brief Loves That Live Forever, The Woman Who Wait

Similar People
  
Ivan Bunin, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Jean‑Claude Servan‑Schreiber, Ain Kaalep, Mahi Binebine

Andrei makine in bucharest gaudeamus bookfair


Andreï Sergeyevich Makine (Russian: Андрей Серге́евич Макин; born 10 September 1957) is a Russian-born French novelist. He also publishes under the pseudonym Gabriel Osmonde. Makine's novels include Dreams of My Russian Summers (1995) which won two top French awards, the Prix Goncourt and the Prix Médicis. He was elected to seat 5 of the Académie française on 3 March 2016, succeeding Assia Djebar.

Contents

Andrei makine la musique d une vie


Biography

Andreï Makine Exile and memory stalk Russian writer Andrei Makine

Andreï Makine was born in Krasnoyarsk, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union on 10 September 1957 and grew up in the city of Penza about 700 kilometres (435 mi) south-east of Moscow. As a boy, having acquired familiarity with France and its language from his French-born grandmother (it is not certain whether Makine had a French grandmother; in later interviews he claimed to have learned French from a friend), he wrote poems in both French and his native Russian.

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In 1987, he went to France as a member of a teacher's exchange program and decided to stay. He was granted political asylum and was determined to make a living as a writer in French. However, Makine had to present his first manuscripts as translations from Russian to overcome publishers' skepticism that a newly arrived exile could write so fluently in a second language. After disappointing reactions to his first two novels, it took eight months to find a publisher for his fourth, Dreams of My Russian Summers. Finally published in 1995 in France, the novel became the first in history to win both the Prix Goncourt and the Prix Médicis plus the Prix Goncourt des Lycéens.

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In 2001 Makine began secretively publishing as "Gabriel Osmonde", a total of four novels over ten years, the last appearing in 2011. It was a French literary mystery and many speculated about who Osmonde might be. Finally in 2011 a scholar noticed Osmonde's book 20,000 femmes dans la vie d’un homme had been inspired by Makine's Dreams of My Russian Summers and Makine confirmed that he was the author. Explaining why he used a pseudonym he said, "I wanted to create someone who lived far from the hurly-burly of the world".

Translations

All of Makine's novels have been translated into English by Geoffrey Strachan.

Andreï Makine Andre Makine French Culture

Le testament français was published in English as Dreams of My Russian Summers in the United States, and under its original French title in the United Kingdom. It has also been translated into Russian by Yuliana Yahnina and Natalya Shakhovskaya, and first published in the 12th issue of the Foreign Literature (Иностранная литература) literary magazine in 1996.

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References

Andreï Makine Wikipedia