Pascale Kramer | |
---|---|
Born | Geneva, Switzerland | 15 December 1963
Occupation | Author, poet |
Nationality | French |
Pascale Kramer (born 15 December 1961) is a French writer and novelist.
Kramer was born on 15 December 1961 in Geneva, Switzerland. Kramer's family moved to Lausanne in 1964. [1] After obtaining her baccalaureat, she studied literature at the University of Lausanne, which she briefly interrupted with studies in journalism, eventually leaving Lausanne [2] and moving to Zürich where she spent six years learning publicity with the Jacques Séguéla group. [3] In 1987, while visiting Paris on business, Kramer chose to relocate there, working in advertising but also writing. [4] [2]
Kramer's first book was Variations on the Same Scene in 1982, followed by Terres Fécondes two years later. A ten-year hiatus followed, but she published Manu in 1996. [5] This won the Michel-Dentan Prize. [4] [6]
Kramer is responsible for organising the documentary film festival Enfances Dans le Monde, [7] the first exhibition of which was held in Paris on 20 November 2010. The day was chosen to mark the International Day of the Rights of the Child. [8]
Kramer received the 2001 Lipp Prize for The Living, a tragic novel telling the story of two children who accidentally die in front of their uncle. [5] Other works of Kramer's have won French awards, such as the Prix Rambert, [9] the Grand Prix SGDL [6] and the Schiller Prize. She also won the Swiss Grand Prix of Literature for her oeuvre. [4] [5] [10]