Nathacha Devi Pathareddy Appanah (born 24 May 1973 in Mahébourg, Mauritius) is a Mauritian-French author. She spent most of her teenage years in Mauritius and also worked as a journalist/columnist at Le Mauricien and Week-End Scope before emigrating to France. She was a contributor to poetry and news section during her tenure in the magazines.
Quick Facts Born, Occupation ...
Nathacha Appanah |
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Nathacha Appanah in 2023 |
Born | Nathacha Devi Pathareddy Appanah (1973-05-24) 24 May 1973 (age 50) Mauritius |
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Occupation | Novelist |
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Language | French |
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Genre | Labor migration |
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Notable awards | Prix RFO du livre |
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Since 1998, Nathacha Appanah is well known as an active writer. Her first book Les Rochers de Poudre d'Or (published by Éditions Gallimard) received the "Prix RFO du livre". The book was based on the arrival of Indian indentured workers in Mauritius. Her other works like The Last Brother, detailing struggles during Nazi attack and migration to Czechoslovakia, and Tropic of Violence, based on children on the streets of Mayotte, are critically acclaimed.
Her first novel was The Rocks of Gold Dust, published in the collection Dark Continents by famous French publisher Gallimard. Her second novel, Blue Bay Palace, details the passion a young Indian for a person from another caste.[3] She also wrote La Noce d'Anna (2005, Éditions Gallimard), which received prizes at some regional festivals in France. The book is set entirely in France. In 2007, she released her fourth book Le Dernier Frère Ed de L'Olivier, which went on to win the Prix FNAC.[4]
Her work Tropic of Violence is based on children on the streets of Mayotte. The struggle of the Department of Migratory authorities and the delinquency of youth has been pictured in the novel. In her own words, Appanah narrates that "I lived in Mayotte from 2008 to 2010 and had been struck by the number of children in the streets. They were not abandoned, they were not the round they were playing happily on every street corner , some were even occasionally at school and in the evening, they found a roof."[4]
Her novel The Last Brother is based on an orphaned Jew who escaped Nazi invasion of Czechoslovakia and was denied entry in British-run Palestine. In a review published in The Guardian about the novel, it has been quoted as "a brilliant and believable account, a compelling picture of a child's loneliness and of the brief, feverish excitement when it ends".[5] New York Times rated her fourth novel, The Last Brother next only to 2008 Nobel Prize winner J. M. G. Le Clézio among all Mauritian writers. The book was translated in English by Geoffrey Strachan and was her second work to be translated.[6]
In 2018 Graywolf Press published Waiting for Tomorrow, also translated into English by Geoffrey Strachan.[7] It was shortlisted for the 2019 Albertine Prize.[8]