Nikolski (novel)
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Nikolski_(novel) an entity of type: WikicatCanadianFrench-languageNovels
Nikolski est un roman québécois paru en 2005 écrit par l'auteur Nicolas Dickner et publié chez Alto. Depuis sa parution, le roman n'a cessé de remporter des prix prestigieux tel le Prix littéraire des collégiens, le Prix des libraires du Québec et le Prix Anne-Hébert.
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Nikolski is a novel by Canadian writer Nicolas Dickner. Originally published in 2005 in French, an English edition translated by Lazer Lederhendler was published in 2008. The original French edition was a nominee for the 2005 Governor General's Award for French fiction, won the Prix Anne-Hébert in 2006, and won the prix litteraire des collegiens, a prize awarded by Quebecois post-secondary students, in 2006. The English translation won the 2008 Governor General's Award for French-to-English translation, and the 2010 edition of Canada Reads.
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Nikolski (roman)
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Nikolski (novel)
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Nikolski est un roman québécois paru en 2005 écrit par l'auteur Nicolas Dickner et publié chez Alto. Depuis sa parution, le roman n'a cessé de remporter des prix prestigieux tel le Prix littéraire des collégiens, le Prix des libraires du Québec et le Prix Anne-Hébert.
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Nikolski is a novel by Canadian writer Nicolas Dickner. Originally published in 2005 in French, an English edition translated by Lazer Lederhendler was published in 2008. The original French edition was a nominee for the 2005 Governor General's Award for French fiction, won the Prix Anne-Hébert in 2006, and won the prix litteraire des collegiens, a prize awarded by Quebecois post-secondary students, in 2006. The English translation won the 2008 Governor General's Award for French-to-English translation, and the 2010 edition of Canada Reads. The novel's story is set in Montreal and revolves around three seemingly disconnected characters (Noah, Joyce and an unnamed narrator) whose lives eventually intersect in the city's Plateau neighbourhood. The title derives from one of the novel's recurring motifs, a broken compass which consistently points to the small village of Nikolski, Alaska instead of the Magnetic North Pole.
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1610