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Sandra Smith
Sandra Smith was born and raised in New York City. As an undergraduate, she spent one year studying at the Sorbonne and fell in love with Paris. Immediately after finishing her BA, she was accepted to do a Master's Degree at New York University, in conjunction with the Sorbonne, and so lived in... show more

Sandra Smith was born and raised in New York City. As an undergraduate, she spent one year studying at the Sorbonne and fell in love with Paris. Immediately after finishing her BA, she was accepted to do a Master's Degree at New York University, in conjunction with the Sorbonne, and so lived in Paris for another year. After completing her MA, she moved to Cambridge, where she began supervising in 20th Century French Literature, Modern French Drama and Translation at the University. Soon afterwards, she was accepted to study for a PhD at Clare College, researching the Surrealist Theatre in France between the two World Wars. Sandra Smith taught French Literature and Language at Robinson College, University of Cambridge for many years before returning to New York, where she currently lives. She has been a guest lecturer and professor at Columbia University, Harvard and Sarah Lawrence College.Literary/Translation Prizes for Suite française:Winner of the Pen Book of the Month Club Translation Prize (USA) 2006Winner of the French-American Florence Gould Foundation Translation Prize (USA) 2007The Quill Award, USA, shortlisted for Book of the Year 2006, General Fiction category. (The only book in translation shortlisted.)Jewish Quarterly Wingate Literary Prize for Fiction 2006. Shortlisted.Jewish Quarterly Wingate Literary Prize for Fiction 2006. Shortlisted.British Book Awards: Border's Book of the Year 2006. Shortlisted.The Oxford Weidenfeld Prize for French Translation. Shortlisted.Independent Newspaper Foreign Fiction Prize: only open to living authors, so ineligible, but awarded a 'Special Commendation' by the panel 19 January 2007.
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No More Booklikes, BYE
No More Booklikes, BYE rated it 7 years ago
Marceline, was taken to a camp with her father when she was just 16. She writes of her nightmare, her community, her country, her family, but mostly the effect of losing her father and his dreams in such a way. Her painful memories that never diminished, while everyone kept telling her to just forge...
theguywhoreads
theguywhoreads rated it 7 years ago
Detachment. Misunderstood. An outsider. The first time I read Albert Camus's The Outsider (also known as The Stranger for U.S. publication), I was recommended that this was his best work. With over a little 100 over pages, divided into two parts, this is a story of Meursault, a man that doesn't conn...
Words, Words, Words
Words, Words, Words rated it 8 years ago
"War … yes, everyone knows what war is like. But occupation is more terrible because people get used to one another. We tell ourselves, 'They’re people just like us after all,' but they’re not at all the same." Irène Némirovski — famed writer, Russian emigre, and woman of Jewish ancestry — in the...
Summer Reading Project, BookLikes Satellite
I had previously thought that John Kennedy Toole’s A Confederacy of Dunces had the saddest publication history of any novel I’d ever read. Irène Némirovsky’s incomplete Suite Française, however, has an even more heartbreaking history. Némirovsky planned a five part novel about the French experience ...
Bettie's Books
Bettie's Books rated it 9 years ago
bookshelves: spring-2016, autobiography-memoir, radio-4, epistolatory-diary-blog, published-2008 Recommended for: BBC Radio Listeners Read from March 18 to 28, 2016 http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0741kpbDescription: Marceline Loridan-Ivens searingly honest memoir is written as an intimate let...
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