WRITER

Jean-Jacques Schuhl

1941 - Today

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Jean-Jacques Schuhl (born 9 October 1941 in Marseille) is a French author, recipient of the 2000 Prix Goncourt literary award for his novel Ingrid Caven. The book is named for the German actress and singer Ingrid Caven, who is his partner. Despite appearances, the novel is not her biography. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Jean-Jacques Schuhl is the 5,622nd most popular writer (up from 5,865th in 2019), the 4,856th most popular biography from France (up from 4,952nd in 2019) and the 615th most popular French Writer.

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Among WRITERS

Among writers, Jean-Jacques Schuhl ranks 5,622 out of 7,302Before him are Hendrik Marsman, Nirmal Verma, Sam Houser, Henry Lincoln, Kenneth Copeland, and Martin Litchfield West. After him are Stephen Leacock, Blas de Otero, Steven Pressfield, Josip Jurčič, Sarah Fuller Flower Adams, and Elvira Lindo.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1941, Jean-Jacques Schuhl ranks 523Before him are Ritt Bjerregaard, David Walker, Marcelo Pagani, Ivica Brzić, Pepi Bader, and Javier Valdivia. After him are Aníbal Tarabini, Anton Pronk, Vidin Apostolov, Péter Balázs, Marilyn Strathern, and Marty Riessen.

Others Born in 1941

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In France

Among people born in France, Jean-Jacques Schuhl ranks 4,856 out of 6,770Before him are Émile Wegelin (1875), Jérôme Le Banner (1972), Laurent Cantet (1961), Ernest Esclangon (1876), Thierry Omeyer (1976), and Georges Gandil (1926). After him are Patrick Chesnais (1947), Olivier Rolin (1947), Gaston Peltier (1876), Jean Taris (1909), Patrick Gaillard (1952), and Johan Micoud (1973).

Among WRITERS In France

Among writers born in France, Jean-Jacques Schuhl ranks 615Before him are Teresa de la Parra (1889), René Benjamin (1885), Armand Lanoux (1913), Léon Frapié (1863), Michel Deguy (1930), and Eugène Dabit (1898). After him are Olivier Rolin (1947), Delphine de Vigan (1966), Jean-Paul Dubois (1950), Charles Le Goffic (1863), Alain Decaux (1925), and Sibylle Riqueti de Mirabeau (1850).