I don’t have live access to the latest updates right now. Here’s what’s widely reported about Neige Sinno in recent years:
- Neige Sinno is a French writer best known for her memoir Sad Tiger (Triste Tigre), which won multiple major prizes including the Prix Femina and the Goncourt des lycéens in 2023. This coverage is detailed in literary and news profiles from 2023–2025.[3][4][5]
- In 2025, English-language coverage and author interviews have continued to discuss Sad Tiger’s impact, translation, and Sinno’s approach to writing about trauma and memory.[2][8]
- Profiles and festival pages highlight her broader body of work, including earlier titles Le Camion (The Truck) and La Vie des rats, and note her work as translator and lecturer.[7][3]
If you’d like, I can pull the very latest headlines or provide a brief bibliography with publication years and prize records, or summarize key themes from her major works. I can also seek out interviews or recent event appearances if you specify a region or format (interview, keynote, podcast, etc.).
Sources
Listen to Writing the Unspeakable: Neige Sinno on Abuse, Memory, and Language from The Shakespeare and Company Interview. Trigger Warning: This episode contains detailed discussions of child sexual abuse, rape, trauma, and the failures of the justice system.In this powerful and deeply affecting conversation, Neige Sinno speaks with Adam Biles about her landmark book Sad Tiger, recently published in English in a luminous translation by Natasha Lehrer. A searing literary interrogation of the...
shows.acast.comNeige Sinno was born in 1977 in the Département Hautes-Alpes, France. She studied American literature and made her debut in 2007 with the short story collection »La vie des rats« (tr: The Life of Rats), which revolves around the themes of youth and loneliness. Her debut novel »Le Camion« (2018; tr: The Truck) tells the […]
literaturfestival.comKnown for: Titel, Thesen, Temperamente, 12h45, Tout le monde en parle
www.imdb.comAlready a winner of the Femina Prize, she won a second major award with the Goncourt des Lycéens for her book on incest.
ground.newsA network of over 100 bookstores, more than 500,000 print books or eBooks, unparalleled expertise. It is possible to buy local on the Web!
www.leslibraires.caThe French author’s award-winning memoir, “Sad Tiger,” is a richly literary and starkly shattering account of childhood sexual abuse. Leslie Camhi writes.
ground.news