François Taillandier

François Taillandier (born in 1955, Clermont-Ferrand, France) is a French writer portraying the French contemporary society.

Life

Henri Vernes, creator of Bob Morane, fired a passion the 12-year-old Taillandier was not going to give up. In 1968 he began to read Honoré de Balzac. This classic French writer and Edmond Rostand, Cyrano's father, had a strong influence on him. Attending classical literature studies in the university, he graduated in 1977 with a memoir about the Marquis de Sade.

In 1979 he taught literature for 4 years before resigning from his position to become a full-time writer.

In 1984 he became journalist for the Revue Hebdo. Taillandier finds the inspiration walking in Paris, listening conversations while in the bistros. In 2006 he was appointed president of the Société des gens de lettres. Taillandier, divorcé, is the father of three.

Works

In 1990 he published Les Clandestins, rewarded by the Prix Jean-Freustié (Jean-Freustié award). In 1992 the novel Les Nuits Racine received the Roger Nimier Prize. In 1999 Anielka is published and received the Prix de l'Académie Française (French Academy award).

In 2005 he published Option Paradis, the first novel in a series of a five-interlinked novels cycle, divided in fifty-five chapters (eleven chapters each novel) called La Grande Intrigue (The Big Plot), reviving a French classical literature tradition (La Comédie Humaine by Honoré de Balzac, Les Rougon-Macquart by Émile Zola). Following the evolution of five families through five generations, this work will be completed in 2010, celebrating the Taillandier's fifty-fifth anniversary. Telling, the second novel of this series was published in 2006.

Present days

He currently writes for French newspapers Le Figaro, l'Humanité[1] et la Montagne and keeps developing La Grande Intrigue, writing "only when everybody is sleeping".[2]

Bibliography

Novels

Short stories

Essays

Biography

Citations

Notes

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