Annie ernaux biography

Annie Thérèse Blanche Ernaux (French: [ɛʁno]; née Duchesne [dyʃɛn]; born 1 September ) is a French writer who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature "for the courage and clinical acuity with which she uncovers the roots, estrangements and collective restraints of personal memory". [1][2] Her literary work, mostly. Annie Ernaux is a French author known for her lightly fictionalized memoirs, which are written in spare, detached prose. Her work examines her memories, sometimes revisiting events in later works and reconstructing them, thus revealing the artifice of her own genre. She won the Nobel Prize for Literature. Early years First steps Professional growth Public recognition Peak period Later years Public interest Professional activity Media attention
Biography Annie Ernaux, née Duchesne, was born in in Lillebonne Normandy. A few years later her parents moved to Yvetot, where they kept a café and grocery shop in a working-class district of the town.