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US Writer Wins France’s Richest Books Prize

  US writer Joyce Carol Oates, so often a bridesmaid for the Nobel literature prize, won France’s richest books prize Monday. Advertisement The Cino del … Continue reading US Writer Wins France’s Richest Books Prize


In this file photo taken on September 9, 2010 US writer Joyce Carol Oates poses during a photocall at the 36th American Film Festival, in Deauville, northwestern France. Kenzo TRIBOUILLARD / AFP
In this file photo taken on September 9, 2010 US writer Joyce Carol Oates poses during a photocall at the 36th American Film Festival, in Deauville, northwestern France. Kenzo TRIBOUILLARD / AFP
 In this file photo taken on September 9, 2010 US writer Joyce Carol Oates poses during a photocall at the 36th American Film Festival, in Deauville, northwestern France. Kenzo TRIBOUILLARD / AFP
In this file photo taken on September 9, 2010 US writer Joyce Carol Oates poses during a photocall at the 36th American Film Festival, in Deauville, northwestern France. Kenzo TRIBOUILLARD / AFP

 

US writer Joyce Carol Oates, so often a bridesmaid for the Nobel literature prize, won France’s richest books prize Monday.

The Cino del Duca World Prize, which is worth 200,000 euros ($218,000), is often seen as a stepping stone to the Nobel, with Andrei Sakharov, Mario Vargas Llosa and the French novelist Patrick Modiano all winning it before going on to Nobel glory.

Five of Oates’ books, including her novel “Blonde”, which chronicled the inner life of Marilyn Monroe, have been finalists for the Pulitzer Prize, without ever winning.

However, the 81-year-old has won the US National Book Award and a host of other accolades for her more than 60 novels, short story collections, plays, and a memoir, “Lost Landscape”.

Regularly tipped for the Nobel, Oates has been hailed for fearlessly walking into some of the most contentious debates in US society, with her novel, “A Book of American Martyrs”, turning on the murder of a doctor in an abortion clinic.

An avid Twitter user, she shares pictures of her cats in between frequent digs at US President Donald Trump, who she has branded a “lunatic”.

“Every day he’s setting these little fires all over” while a “more dangerous fire… is corroding away, one by one, the things that we hold dear,” she said last year.

The prize is named after an Italian-born businessman, film producer, and philanthropist and run by the Institut de France, which includes the Academie Francaise, the guardian of the French language, and its official dictionary.

It was due to be handed to Oates in Paris next month but the ceremony has been cancelled because of the coronavirus.