Jump to content

Frédéric Vitoux (writer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Timzy D'Great (talk | contribs) at 23:17, 28 August 2023 (+image #WPWP #WPWPNG). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Frédéric Vitoux
Born (1944-08-19) 19 August 1944 (age 80)
NationalityFrench
EducationLycée Charlemagne
Occupation(s)Writer
Journalist
Known forMember of the Académie Française

Frédéric Vitoux (born 19 August 1944) is a French writer and journalist.

He is known as a novelist, biographer and literary columnist. His father was a journalist.[1] He was elected at the Académie Française in 2001. In 2010, he won the Édouard Drumont literary prize[2] for his novel Grand Hotel Nelson.

Bibliography

  • 1973 Louis-Ferdinand Céline, Misère et parole (Éditions Gallimard)
  • 1973 Cartes postales (Gallimard)
  • 1976 Les Cercles de l'orage (Grasset)
  • 1976 Bébert, le chat de Louis-Ferdinand Céline (Grasset)
  • 1978 Yedda jusqu'à la fin (Grasset)
  • 1978 Céline (Belfond) [3]
  • 1979 Un amour de chat (Balland)
  • 1981 Mes îles Saint-Louis (Le Chêne)
  • 1982 Gioacchino Rossini (Le Seuil)
  • 1983 Fin de saison au Palazzo Pedrotti (Le Seuil)
  • 1985 La Nartelle (Le Seuil)
  • 1986 Il me semble désormais que Roger est en Italie (Actes-Sud)
  • 1987 Riviera (Le Seuil)
  • 1988 La Vie de Céline (Grasset)
  • 1990 Sérénissime (Le Seuil)
  • 1990 L'Art de vivre à Venise (Flammarion)
  • 1992 Charles et Camille (Le Seuil)
  • 1993 Paris vu du Louvre (A. Biro)
  • 1994 La Comédie de Terracina (Le Seuil)
  • 1996 Deux femmes (Le Seuil)
  • 1998 Esther et le diplomate (Le Seuil)
  • 2000 L'ami de mon père (Le Seuil)
  • 2001 Le Var pluriel et singulier (Équinoxe)
  • 2003 Des dahlias rouge et mauve (Le Seuil)
  • 2004 Villa Sémiramis (Le Seuil)
  • 2005 Le roman de Figaro (Fayard)

References

  1. ^ Magazine litteraire: Issues 389-393 2000 "Le père de Frédéric Vitoux, journaliste au Petit Parisien pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, avait également "
  2. ^ "Prix littéraire".
  3. ^ Bitter carnival: ressentiment and the abject hero - Page 218 Michael André Bernstein - 1992 "Barthes's description is quoted in a list of observations about Céline, some favorable, others hostile, gathered by Frédéric Vitoux in his study Céline (Paris: Pierre Belfond, 1978), pp. 243–44"