Jean-Alain Tremblay (March 18, 1952 - June 9, 2005) was a writer who lived in the Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean region of Quebec, Canada.[1]
The son of Gérard Tremblay and Rita Dufour, he was born Jeannot Tremblay in Alma, Quebec. Tremblay received a bachelor's degree in administration from Laval University.[1] He worked as director of employment development at Chicoutimi for Employment and Immigration Canada[2] and later as director of regional operations for Réseau Emploi-Québec du Saguenay/Lac St-Jean.[3]
His first novel La nuit des Perséides, published in 1989, received the Prix Robert-Cliche, the and the . This was followed by La grande chamaille, published in 1993. Tremblay also wrote a radio drama Par la bande, broadcast on Radio-Canada in 2001. He published a nine volume collection of short stories based in the Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean region: Un lac, un fjord, un fleuve.[1]
Tremblay was president of the Musée Louis-Hémon de Péribonka from 1992 to 1995 and was a founding member of the Association professionnelle des écrivains de la Sagamie Côte-Nord, also serving as its president.[1]
He was married to Manon Brault; the couple had four children.[3]
Tremblay died in Chicoutimi at the age of 53.[3]