Events
"L'humeur vagabonde" on France Inter
Tuesday 26 May
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20h00
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60 min
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France Inter radio broadcast
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Les Subsistances - Plateau 2
With: Julia Leigh, Marie NDiaye
This radio programme will be broadcast live from the Subsistances from Monday 25 to Thursday 28 May. Every evening, Katherine Evin, the show’s host, will welcome one author.
Julia Leigh was born in Sydney in 1970 where she later studied philosophy and law. Her first novel, The Hunter (1999) was a huge success, for which she was awarded numerous prizes in Australia, America and England. It has been translated into six different languages. Her second novel, Disquiet (2008), recounts the story of Olivia who leaves Australia with her two children to move to the family chateau in France where she grew up. Disturbing, fascinating and timeless, Disquiet is a roman noir which leaves us suspended in a nightmare.
Born in Pithviers in 1967, Marie NDiaye is the author of plays, novels and short-stories. She was awarded the Prix Femina in 2001 for Rosie Carpe (Minuit) and her play, Papa doit manger (Minuit), has been performed at the Comédie Française. Her novels are filled with weighty secrets and intangible mysteries, exploring the shady corners of a world in which appearances and reality merge. With Mon coeur à l’étroit, she once again brilliantly conveys a sense of anxiety and malaise which leads the reader into the labyrinth wanderings of a bad dream.
Julia Leigh was born in Sydney in 1970 where she later studied philosophy and law. Her first novel, The Hunter (1999) was a huge success, for which she was awarded numerous prizes in Australia, America and England. It has been translated into six different languages. Her second novel, Disquiet (2008), recounts the story of Olivia who leaves Australia with her two children to move to the family chateau in France where she grew up. Disturbing, fascinating and timeless, Disquiet is a roman noir which leaves us suspended in a nightmare.
Born in Pithviers in 1967, Marie NDiaye is the author of plays, novels and short-stories. She was awarded the Prix Femina in 2001 for Rosie Carpe (Minuit) and her play, Papa doit manger (Minuit), has been performed at the Comédie Française. Her novels are filled with weighty secrets and intangible mysteries, exploring the shady corners of a world in which appearances and reality merge. With Mon coeur à l’étroit, she once again brilliantly conveys a sense of anxiety and malaise which leads the reader into the labyrinth wanderings of a bad dream.
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8, bis Quai Saint-Vincent, 69001 Lyon
04 78 39 10 02
8, bis Quai Saint-Vincent, 69001 Lyon
04 78 39 10 02