Ann Scott

Ann Scott

Ann Scott, Paris, 2005
Born 3 November 1965 (1965-11-03) (age 46)
Paris, France
Occupation Novelist
Genres Fiction
Literary movement Postmodern


www.annscott.fr

Ann Scott (b. 3 November 1965, Paris, France) is a French novelist.

She is regarded as a social realist for her novels, which paint detailed portraits of contemporary youth haunted by teenage boredom, drugs, materialism, status obsession and social trangression. Her second novel Superstars has given her a cult status in France.[1]

Contents

Biography

She was born and raised in Paris, France. Her mother is a news photographer of Russian descent, and her father, a French businessman and art collector.

At age 16, she moved alone to London, England where she became a musician, playing drums with local punk bands. At 18, she turned to fashion modelling for three years and was one of the first tattooed fashion model to break through in prêt-à-porter and couture in the eighties.[2]

She is now a fiction writer and the author of six novels including Superstars which has become a cult novel translated in several countries. She also publishes short stories in magazines and co-wrote Paradize for French band Indochine for their album of the same title.

Personal life

She has been romantically involved with musicians from the London eighties rock scene and is also known to have had bisexual affairs.[3]

Controversy

She was strongly rejected by a part of the French gay and lesbian community after declaring on the set of French TV show Nulle Part Ailleurs that she found homosexuality "immature"[4] : "Being bisexual has often brought some kind of balance to my life, but having strict homosexual relationships led to pathological experiences for me ".[5]

Bibliography

Published (in French) Original title
1996 Asphyxie
2000 Superstars
2002 Poussières d'anges
2004 Le pire des mondes
2005 Héroïne
2008 Les chewing gums ne sont pas biodégradables
2010 A la folle jeunesse

All titles in paperback by J'ai lu Publishers.

References

  1. ^ By French writer and book critic Frédéric Beigbeder on the TV show Rive Droite Rive Gauche and later most of the French press gave her the same status, including Le Monde, 20th August 2005
  2. ^ Femme Actuelle, 2000
  3. ^ Bisexuality
  4. ^ See Nova Magazine, February 2001
  5. ^ Nulle Part Ailleurs, Canal Plus, 1rst January 2001

External links