France Huser Explained
France Huser is a French novelist and art critic who lives and works in Paris.
Biography
France Huser was an art critic at the Nouvel Observateur for many years. Her first novel, La maison du désir, "the book of feelings", won her critical and popular success.[1] She is the author of eleven novels including Aurélia, La colline rouge, and Le murmure des sables published by Editions du Seuil, and La fille à lèvre d'orange, La triche and La peau seulement published by Gallimard. France Huser was awarded the Amerigo Vespucci prize in 2004 for her novel Le murmure des sables.
Novels
- 1982: La maison du désir, Paris, Éditions du Seuil,
- 1984: Aurélia, Le Seuil,
- 1986: La chambre ouverte, Le Seuil,
- 1988: Les lèvres nues, Le Seuil,
- 1992: La colline rouge, Le Seuil,
- 1993: Charlotte Corday ou l'Ange de la colère, Paris, Éditions Robert Laffont,
- 1999: Les rescapés du Titanic, Bernard Géniès, France Huser, Fayard,
- 2004: Le murmure des sables, Le Seuil,
- 2006: La fille à lèvre d'orange, Paris, Éditions Gallimard, 144 pages
- 2010: La triche, Gallimard, 176 pages
- 2011: La peau seulement, Gallimard
References
- She appeared on the French television program Apostrophes in January 1983 with Françoise Dolto. See the INA archives.
External links