Awards & Winners

Claude Simon

Date of Birth 10-October-1913
Place of Birth Antananarivo
(Madagascar, Analamanga, Madagascar)
Nationality France
Also know as Claude. Simon
Profession Novelist
Claude Simon was a French novelist and the 1985 Nobel Laureate in Literature. He was born in Antananarivo, Madagascar, and died in Paris, France. His parents were French, his father being a career officer who was killed in the First World War. He grew up with his mother and her family in Perpignan in the middle of the wine district of Roussillon. Among his ancestors was a general from the time of the French Revolution. After secondary school at Collège Stanislas in Paris and brief sojourns at Oxford and Cambridge he took courses in painting at the André Lhote Academy. He then travelled extensively through Spain, Germany, the Soviet Union, Italy and Greece. This experience as well as those from the Second World War show up in his literary work. At the beginning of the war Claude Simon took part in the battle of the Meuse and was taken prisoner. He managed to escape and joined the resistance movement. At the same time he completed his first novel, Le Tricheur, which he had started to write before the war. He lived in Paris and used to spend part of the year at Salses in the Pyrenees. In 1961 Claude Simon received the prize of L'Express for La Route des Flandres and in 1967 the Médicis prize for Histoire. The University of East Anglia made him honorary doctor in 1973.

Awards by Claude Simon

Check all the awards nominated and won by Claude Simon.

1985


Nobel Prize in Literature
(who in his novel combines the poet's and the painter's creativeness with a deepened awareness of time in the depiction of the human condition)

1972


Nominations 1972 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Neustadt International Prize for Literature