France Daigle

France Daigle
Born (1953-11-18) November 18, 1953
Occupation Novelist, playwright, columnist
Nationality Canadian
Genre novels, plays, weekly column in L'Acadie Nouvelle

France Daigle (born 18 November 1953) is a Canadian author of Acadian ethnicity. Born and raised in Moncton, New Brunswick, she has published nine novels and three plays. She writes in French and has pioneered the use of the Chiac in her written dialogue.[1] She uses standard French in her narration.

She was awarded the 1999 France-Acadie award for her novel Pas Pire[2] and the 2002 Éloize award for Un fin passage. She has written three plays with the avant garde theatre company Moncton Sable.[3] She was formerly writer in residence at the University of Ottawa.

In 2012 she won the Governor General's Literary Prize in French fiction for her novel "Pour sûr", the result of ten years of work.[4] That same year she won the Lieutenant-Governor's Award for High Achievement in the Arts for French Language Literary Arts.[5]

Publications

Theatrical works

References

  1. Onesheet Celebrating Chiac
  2. Récipiendaires du prix France-Acadie
  3. "Moncton Sable", Canadian Theatre Encyclopedia
  4. CBC
  5. "2014 LGA Winners". artsnb. Retrieved 30 January 2015.


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