Françoise Lepage

French writer
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroFrench writer
PlacesFrance
wasWriter Children's writer
Work fieldLiterature
Gender
Female
Birth29 December 1945, Saint-Amand-Montrond, France
Death23 January 2010Ottawa, Canada (aged 64 years)
Star signCapricorn
Awards
Prix Champlain2001
Prix Gabrielle-Roy2000
The details

Biography

Françoise Lepage (December 29, 1945 – January 23, 2010) was a Franco-Ontarian educator and writer.

She was born in Saint-Amand-Montrond, France, came to Canada in 1969 and settled in Ottawa in 1976. She taught children's literature at the University of Ottawa. Lepage had also worked as a librarian and as a translator.

She published Histoire de la littérature pour la jeunesse in 2000, which won the Prix Gabrielle Roy, the Prix Champlain and the Prix du livre de la Ville d'Ottawa, and then Dictionnaire des auteurs et des illustrateurs. She also published Paule Daveluy ou la passion des mots.

Lepage wrote a number of children's books and had also begun to write some adult fiction.

Her husband Yvan Lepage died in 2008. She died in Ottawa at the age of 64 from cancer.

Selected works[2]

  • Poupeska (2006), received the Trillium Book Award and was nominated for a Governor General's Award
  • Soudain l'étrangeté (2010)
  • La fileuse de pailles et autres contes, adapted from stories by Germain Lemieux (2011)
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 28 Apr 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.