Tanguy Viel (7 July 1973,
Brest) is a French writer. A resident at the
Villa Médicis in 2003–2004, Tanguy Viel was awarded the
Prix Fénéon and the
Prix littéraire de la vocation for his novel L'absolue perfection du crime. He also won the
Grand prix RTL-Lire for Article 353 du Code pénal in 2017.[1] Other Press in New York published the translation by William Rodarmor in March, 2019. La fille qu'on appelle was one of nine novels in the second selection for the 2021
Prix Goncourt.[2]
2002 : Tanguy Viel parle des Éditions de Minuit (interviews with Amandine Riant and Marie-Thérèse Roinet), Saint-Cloud, Université de Paris X, Pôle des métiers du livre
ISBN2-9518614-0-0
2008 : "Tanguy Viel : imaginaire d'un romancier contemporain", interview with
Roger-Michel Allemand [
fr], @nalyses (Université d'Ottawa)
[1]
Tanguy Viel (7 July 1973,
Brest) is a French writer. A resident at the
Villa Médicis in 2003–2004, Tanguy Viel was awarded the
Prix Fénéon and the
Prix littéraire de la vocation for his novel L'absolue perfection du crime. He also won the
Grand prix RTL-Lire for Article 353 du Code pénal in 2017.[1] Other Press in New York published the translation by William Rodarmor in March, 2019. La fille qu'on appelle was one of nine novels in the second selection for the 2021
Prix Goncourt.[2]
2002 : Tanguy Viel parle des Éditions de Minuit (interviews with Amandine Riant and Marie-Thérèse Roinet), Saint-Cloud, Université de Paris X, Pôle des métiers du livre
ISBN2-9518614-0-0
2008 : "Tanguy Viel : imaginaire d'un romancier contemporain", interview with
Roger-Michel Allemand [
fr], @nalyses (Université d'Ottawa)
[1]