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{{Short description|French literary award}}
The '''Prix Goncourt''' is the most prestigious prize in [[French language]] [[literature]], given to the [[author]] of "the best imaginary prose work of the year".
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2020}}
{{Infobox award
| name = Prix Goncourt
| image = Prix Goncourt.jpg
| awarded_for = "the best and most imaginative prose work of the year"
| reward = €10
| presenter = [[Académie Goncourt]]
| date = November, annual
| country = [[France]]
| year = 1903
| website = {{URL|https://academiegoncourt.com}}
}}


The '''Prix Goncourt''' ({{langx|fr|Le prix Goncourt}}, {{IPA|fr|lə pʁi ɡɔ̃kuʁ|IPA}}, ''The Goncourt Prize'') is a prize in [[French literature]], given by the [[académie Goncourt]] to the author of "the best and most imaginative prose work of the year". The prize carries a symbolic reward of only 10 euros, but results in considerable recognition and book sales for the winning author. Four other prizes are also awarded: '''prix Goncourt du Premier Roman''' (first novel), '''prix Goncourt de la Nouvelle''' (short story), '''prix Goncourt de la Poésie''' (poetry) and '''prix Goncourt de la Biographie''' (biography). Of the "big six" French literary awards, the Prix Goncourt is the best known and most prestigious.<ref name="Unwin 1997b">{{cite book|title=The Cambridge Companion to the French Novel: From 1800 to the Present |first=Timothy|last=Unwin |page=xxii |chapter=Introduction |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mIq99LRgKw8C&pg=PR22 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1997 |isbn=9780521499149|quote=The 'big six' literary prizes in France have an extremely high profile and are, significantly, all awarded for novels. The best known and most prestigious is the Prix Goncourt. The other major literary prizes are the Grand Prix du Roman de l'Academie Francaise, the Prix Femina (awarded by a jury of women, though not necessarily to a female novelist), the Prix Renaudot, the Prix Interallie and the Prix Medicis.}}</ref> The other major literary prizes include the {{Lang|fr|[[Grand Prix du roman de l'Académie française]]|italic=no}}, the [[Prix Femina]], the {{Lang|fr|[[Prix Renaudot]]|italic=no}}, the [[Prix Interallié]] and the [[Prix Médicis]].<ref name="Unwin 1997b"/>
[[Edmond Louis Antoine Huot de Goncourt|Edmond de Goncourt]], a successful author, critic, and publisher, bequeathed his entire estate for the foundation and maintenance of the [[Académie Goncourt]]. In honour of his brother and collaborator, Jules Alfred Huot de Goncourt, (1830-1870), the Académie has awarded the Prix Goncourt every December since [[1903]]. The jury that determines the winner meets at the ''Drouant'' restaurant to make its decision. The award, though nominal, ensures the winner celebrity status and a boost in sales.


==History==
A few of the authors who have won the prize are: [[Marcel Proust]], [[Jean Fayard]], [[Simone de Beauvoir]] , [[Georges Duhamel]], [[Alphonse de Chateaubriant]], [[Antonine Maillet]].
[[File:Edmond Goncourt - Schriftsteller.jpg|right|thumb|[[Edmond de Goncourt]]]]
[[Edmond de Goncourt]], a successful author, critic, and publisher, bequeathed his estate for the foundation and maintenance of the [[Académie Goncourt]].<ref name="Burke">{{cite book |title=Writers in Paris: Literary Lives in the City of Light |first=David|last=Burke |publisher=Counterpoint Press |year=2008 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cSplzKidZ6AC&pg=PA181 |page=181|isbn=9781593761578}}</ref> In honour of his brother and collaborator, [[Jules de Goncourt|Jules Alfred Huot de Goncourt]] (1830–1870), the académie has awarded the Prix Goncourt every December since 1903.<ref name="Burke"/> The jury that determines the winner meets at the ''[[Drouant]]'' restaurant in November to make its decision.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Companion Guide to Paris |first=Anthony|last=Glyn |url=https://archive.org/details/companionguideto0000glyn |url-access=registration |page=[https://archive.org/details/companionguideto0000glyn/page/98 98] |publisher=Companion Guides |year=2000|isbn=9781900639200}}</ref> Notable winners of the prize include [[Marcel Proust]] (''[[In Search of Lost Time]]''), [[Simone de Beauvoir]] (''[[The Mandarins]]''), [[André Malraux]] (''[[Man's Fate]]'') and [[Marguerite Duras]] (''[[The Lover (1984 novel)|The Lover]]'').<ref name="Burke"/>


The award was initially established to provide talented new authors with a monetary award that would allow them to write a second book.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Contradictions of Freedom: Philosophical Essays on Simone de Beauvoir's The Mandarins |author=Sally J. Scholz |publisher=SUNY Press |year=2005 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cfawyAOgNQoC&pg=PA18 |page=18|isbn=9780791465608 }}</ref> Today, the Goncourt has a token prize amount (around 10 euros), about the same amount given in 1903, and so the prestige of the prize has been explained not because of the cash-value of the prize, but "in terms of the tremendous book sales it effects: the Goncourt winner becomes an instant millionaire."<ref>{{cite book |title=The Economy of Prestige: prizes, awards, and the circulation of cultural value |author= James F English |page=61 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vY3UOFDA2sAC&pg=PA231 |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=2009|isbn= 9780674036536 }}</ref> [[Hervé Le Tellier]]'s ''[[The Anomaly (novel)|The Anomaly]]'', which won the Goncourt in 2020, exceeded a million copies in less than a year after its publication.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Girgis |first=Dahlia |date=7 May 2021 |title=Un tirage total d'un million d'exemplaires pour "L'anomalie" |language=fr |work=Livres Hebdo |url=https://www.livreshebdo.fr/article/un-tirage-total-dun-million-dexemplaires-pour-lanomalie |access-date=8 August 2021}}</ref>
Some decisions for awarding the prize were controversial, the most famous case being the decision to award the prize [[1919]] to [[Marcel Proust]]; this was met with indignation, since many in the public felt that the prize should have gone to [[Roland Dorgelès]] for ''Les Croix de bois'', a novel about the [[First World War]], for the following reasons:
* the prize was supposed to be awarded to promising young authors, whereas Proust was 48;
* this was immediately after the end of the war, where Dorgelès had fought, whereas Proust had been deemed unfit for service for medical reasons (he had [[asthma]]).


In 1987, the [[Prix Goncourt des Lycéens]] was established, as a collaboration between the [[académie Goncourt]], the French Ministry of Education, and [[Fnac]], a book, music, and movie retailer.
==Prize winners==


The {{Lang|fr|[[Prix Renaudot]]|italic=no}} is announced at the same ceremony as the Prix Goncourt. It has become known as something of a second-place prize.<ref>{{cite book | title=A New History of French Literature |first=Denis|last=Hollier |page=967 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nGQOodBVG9YC&pg=PA967 |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=1994|isbn=9780674615663}}</ref>
* [[1903]] - [[John Antoine Nau]], ''Force ennemie''
* [[1904]] - [[Léon Frapié]], ''La Maternelle''
* [[1905]] - [[Claude Farrère]], ''Les Civilisés''
* [[1906]] - [[Jérôme et Jean Tharaud]], ''Dingley, l'illustre écrivain''
* [[1907]] - [[E. Moselly]], ''Le Rouet d'ivoire''
* [[1908]] - [[Francis de Miomandre]], ''Ecrit sur l'eau''
* [[1909]] - [[Marius et Ary Leblond]], ''En France''
* [[1910]] - [[Louis Pergaud]], ''De Goupil à Margot''
* [[1911]] - [[Alphonse de Chateaubriant]], ''Monsieur des Lourdines''
* [[1912]] - [[André Savignon]], ''Les Filles de la pluie''
* [[1913]] - [[Marc Elder]], ''Le peuple de la mer''
* [[1914]] - [[Adrien Bertrand]], ''l'Appel du Sol''
* [[1915]] - [[René Benjamin]], ''Gaspard''
* [[1916]] - [[Henri Barbusse]], ''le Feu''
* [[1917]] - [[Henri Malherbe]], ''La Flamme au poing''
* [[1918]] - [[Georges Duhamel]], ''Civilisation''
* [[1919]] - [[Marcel Proust]], ''A l'ombre des jeunes filles en fleur'' (volume 2 of ''- [[A la recherche du temps perdu]],'')
* [[1920]] - [[E. Perochon]], ''Nene''
* [[1921]] - [[René Maran]], ''Batouala''
* [[1922]] - [[Henry Béraud]], ''Le vitriol de la lune'' and ''Le martyre de l'obèse''
* [[1923]] - [[L. Fabre]], ''Rabevel ou Le mal des ardents''
* [[1924]] - [[Thierry Sandre]], ''Le Chèvrefeuille, le Purgatoire, le Chapitre XIII''
* [[1925]] - [[Maurice Genevoix]], ''Raboliot''
* [[1926]] - [[H. Deberly]], ''Le supplice de Phèdre''
* [[1927]] - [[Maurice Bedel]], ''J&eacute;r&ocirc;me 60° latitude nord''
* [[1928]] - [[Maurice Constantin Weyer]], ''Un Homme se penche sur son passé''
* [[1929]] - [[Marcel Arland]], ''L'Ordre''
* [[1930]] - [[H. Fauconnier]], ''Malaisie''
* [[1931]] - [[Jean Fayard]], ''Mal d'amour''
* [[1932]] - [[Guy Mazeline]], ''Les Loups''
* [[1933]] - [[André Malraux]], ''La Condition humaine''
* [[1934]] - [[Roger Vercel]], ''Capitaine Conan''
* [[1935]] - [[Joseph Peyre]], ''Sang et Lumières''
* [[1936]] - [[Maxence Van Der Meersch]], ''L'Empreinte de Dieu''
* [[1937]] - [[Charles Plisnier]], ''Faux Passeports''
* [[1938]] - [[Henri Troyat]], ''L'Araignée''
* [[1939]] - [[P. Heriat]], ''Les enfants gâtés''
* [[1940]] - [[Francis Ambriere]], ''Les grandes vacances''
* [[1941]] - [[Henri Pourrat]], ''Le vent de mars''
* [[1942]] - [[Bernard Marc]], ''Pareil à des enfants''
* [[1943]] - [[Marius Grout]], ''Passage de l'Homme''
* [[1944]] - [[Elsa Triolet]], ''Le premier accroc co&ucirc;te 200 Francs''
* [[1945]] - [[Jean-Louis Bory]], ''Mon village à l'heure allemande''
* [[1946]] - [[Jean-Jacques Gautier]], ''Histoire d'un Fait divers''
* [[1947]] - [[Jean-Louis Curtis]], ''Les For&ecirc;ts de la Nuit''
* [[1948]] - [[ Maurice Druon]], ''Les grandes familles''
* [[1949]] - [[Robert Merle]], ''Week-end à Zuydcoote''
* [[1950]] - [[Paul Colin]], ''Les jeux sauvages''
* [[1951]] - [[Julien Gracq]], ''Le Rivage des Syrtes'' ('''Refusal of the price''')
* [[1952]] - [[Béatrice Beck]], ''Léon Morin, Pr&ecirc;tre''
* [[1953]] - [[Pierre Gascar]], ''Les B&ecirc;tes''
* [[1954]] - [[Simone de Beauvoir]], ''Mandarins''
* [[1955]] - [[Roger Ikor]], ''Les eaux m&ecirc;lées''
* [[1956]] - [[Romain Gary]], ''[[Les racines du ciel]]''
* [[1957]] - [[Roger Vailland]], ''La Loi''
* [[1958]] - [[Francis Walder]], ''Saint Germain ou la Négociation''
* [[1959]] - [[André Schwartz-Bart]], ''Le dernier des Justes''
* [[1960]] - [[Vintila Horia]], ''Dieu est né en exil''
* [[1961]] - [[Jean Cau]], ''La pitié de Dieu''
* [[1962]] - [[Anna Langfus]], ''Les bagages de sable''
* [[1963]] - [[Armand Lanoux]], ''Quand la mer se retire''
* [[1964]] - [[Georges Conchon]], ''L'Etat sauvage''
* [[1965]] - [[J. Borel]], ''L'Adoration''
* [[1966]] - [[Edmonde Charles-Roux]], ''Oublier Palerme''
* [[1967]] - [[André Pieyre de Mandiargues]], ''La Marge''
* [[1968]] - [[Bernard Clavel]], ''Les fruits de l'hiver''
* [[1969]] - [[Félicien Marceau]], ''Creezy''
* [[1970]] - [[Michel Tournier ]], ''Le Roi des Aulnes''
* [[1971]] - [[Jacques Laurent]], ''Les Bêtises''
* [[1972]] - [[Jean Carrière]], ''L'Epervier de Maheux''
* [[1973]] - [[Jacques Chessex]], ''L'Ogre''
* [[1974]] - [[ Pascal Lainé]], ''La Dentellière''
* [[1975]] - [[Emile Ajar]] ([[Romain Gary]]), ''[[La vie devant soi]]''
* [[1976]] - [[Patrick Grainville]], ''Les Flamboyants''
* [[1977]] - [[Didier Decoin]], ''John l'enfer''
* [[1978]] - [[Patrick Modiano]], ''Rue des boutiques obscures''
* [[1979]] - [[Antonine Maillet]], ''Pélagie la Charette''
* [[1980]] - [[Yves Navarre]], ''Le Jardin d'acclimatation''
* [[1981]] - [[Lucien Bodard]], ''Anne Marie''
* [[1982]] - [[Dominique Fernandez]], ''dans la main de l'Ange''
* [[1983]] - [[Frédérick Tristan]], ''Les égarés''
* [[1984]] - [[Marguerite Duras]], ''L'Amant''
* [[1985]] - [[Yann Queffelec]], ''Les Noces barbares''
* [[1986]] - [[Michel Host ]], ''Valet de nuit''
* [[1987]] - [[Tahar ben Jelloun]], ''La Nuit sacrée''
* [[1988]] - [[Erik Orsenna]], ''L'Exposition coloniale''
* [[1989]] - [[Jean Vautrin]], ''Un grand pas vers le Bon Dieu''
* [[1990]] - [[Jean Rouaud]], ''Les Champs d'honneur''
* [[1991]] - [[Pierre Combescot]], ''Les Filles du Calvaire''
* [[1992]] - [[Patrick Chamoiseau]], ''Texaco''
* [[1993]] - [[Amin Maalouf]], ''Le Rocher de Tanios''
* [[1994]] - [[Didier Van Cauwelaert]], ''Un Aller simple''
* [[1995]] - [[Andre&iuml; Makine]], ''Le Testament français''
* [[1996]] - [[Pascale Roze]], ''Le Chasseur Zéro''
* [[1997]] - [[Patrick Rambaud]], ''La Bataille''
* [[1998]] - [[Paule Constant]], ''Confidence pour confidence''
* [[1999]] - [[Jean Echenoz]], ''Je m'en vais''
* [[2000]] - [[Jean-Jacques Schuhl]], ''Ingrid Caven''
* [[2001]] - [[Jean-Christophe Rufin]], ''[[Rouge Brésil]]''
* [[2002]] - [[Pascal Quignard]], ''Les Ombres errantes''
* [[2003]] - [[Jacques-Pierre Amette]], ''La maîtresse de Brecht''
* 2004 - [[Laurent Gaudé]], ''Le Soleil des Scorta''


===Controversies===
== Related articles ==
[[File:Prix Goncourt - Paris 3 novembre 2016 002.jpg|thumb|left|Journalists at [[Drouant|Le Drouant]] restaurant, 2016 Prix Goncourt.]]
[[List of prizes, medals, and awards]]
Within months of the first prize in 1903, it spawned a "hostile counter-prize" in the form of the [[Prix Femina]] to counter the all-male Jury of the Goncourt with an all-female jury on the Femina.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Economy of Prestige: prizes, awards, and the circulation of cultural value |author= James F English |page=61 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vY3UOFDA2sAC&pg=PA61 |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=2009|isbn= 9780674036536 }}</ref>


Some choices have been controversial, a famous example was [[Marcel Proust]] in 1919; it was met with indignation by the public since many believed that the prize should have gone to [[Roland Dorgelès]] for ''Les Croix de bois'', a novel about the [[World War I|First World War]].<ref name="Rodic">{{cite book |title=Lyricism and Politics in Paul Valery's Poetry and Poetic Theory and in "La Nouvelle Revue Francaise", 1909–1939 |first=Vesna |last=Rodic |year=2008 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SxE9rJeGkewC&pg=PA7|isbn=9781109096477}}</ref><ref name="Ashley 2004a">{{cite book |title=Prix Goncourt, 1902–2003: essals critiques |editor-last=Ashley |editor-first=Katherine |publisher=Peter Lang |location=Bern |year=2004 |language=fr |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QA_rVRar1JkC&pg=PA77 |chapter=L'Attribution du prix Goncourt à Proust en 1919|isbn=9783039100187 }}</ref> The prize was supposed to be awarded to promising young authors, whereas Proust was not considered "young" at 48 – however Proust was a beginning author which is the only eligibility requirement, age being unimportant.<ref name="Rodic"/><ref name="Ashley 2004a"/>
[[da:Goncourtprisen]]

[[de:Prix Goncourt]]
In 1921, [[Rene Maran]] won the Goncourt with ''[[Batouala (novel)|Batouala, veritable roman negre]]'', the first French novel to openly criticize European colonialism in Africa.<ref name="Unwin 1997a"/> The novel caused "violent reactions" and was banned in all the French colonies.<ref name="Unwin 1997a">{{cite book|title=The Cambridge Companion to the French Novel: From 1800 to the Present |first=Timothy|last=Unwin |page=195 |chapter=The colonial and postcolonial Francophone novel |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mIq99LRgKw8C&pg=PA195 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1997|isbn=9780521499149}}</ref>
[[eo:Premio Goncourt]]

[[es:Premio Goncourt]]
In 1932, the prize was controversial for passing up [[Louis-Ferdinand Céline]]'s ''[[Voyage au bout de la nuit]]'' for [[Guy Mazeline]]'s ''Les Loups''.<ref>{{cite book |title=Prix Goncourt, 1902–2003: essals critiques |editor-last=Ashley |editor-first=Katherine |publisher=Peter Lang |location=Bern |year=2004 |language=fr |page=16 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QA_rVRar1JkC&pg=PA16|isbn=9783039100187 }}</ref> The voting process became the basis of the 1992 book ''Goncourt 32'' by [[Eugène Saccomano]].<ref>{{cite book |first=Sébastien|last=Lapaque |work=[[Le Figaro]] |date=16 September 1999 |title=Céline-Mazeline sur le ring |language=fr}}</ref>
[[fr:Prix Goncourt]]

[[pl:Nagroda Goncourt]]
Although the award may only be given to an author once, [[Romain Gary]] won it twice, in 1956 for ''[[Les racines du ciel]]'' and again under the pseudonym [[Émile Ajar]] in 1975 for ''[[La vie devant soi]]''.<ref name="Ashley 2004b">{{cite book |title=Prix Goncourt, 1902–2003: essals critiques |editor-last=Ashley |editor-first=Katherine |publisher=Peter Lang |location=Bern |year=2004 |language=fr |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QA_rVRar1JkC&pg=PA16 |chapter=Avant propos|isbn=9783039100187 }}</ref> The Académie Goncourt awarded the prize to Ajar without knowing his real identity.<ref name="Ashley 2004b"/> A period of literary intrigue followed. Gary's cousin's son Paul Pavlowitch posed as the author for a time. Gary later revealed the truth in his posthumous book ''Vie et mort d'Émile Ajar''.<ref name="Ashley 2004b"/>
[[Category:French literary awards]]

In September 2021, the Goncourt attracted controversy after the jury decided, by a vote of 7 to 3, to include ''Les enfants de Cadillac'' by [[François Noudelmann]] on its 2021 list of finalists. Noudelmann is the partner of [[Camille Laurens]], who is a member of the prize's jury. Laurens voted in favor of her partner's book.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Onishi |first1=Norimitsu |last2=Méheut |first2=Constant |title=In Paris, It's Literary Scandal Season Again |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/29/world/europe/france-literary-scandals.html |access-date=30 September 2021 |date=29 September 2021}}</ref> In October 2021, the [[Académie Goncourt]] ultimately decided that it will no longer allow lovers and family members of the jury to be entered for consideration.<ref>{{Cite news |date=5 October 2021 |title=No lovers allowed in top French book prize after ethics scandal |language=en |work=[[France 24]] |agency=[[Agence France-Presse]] |url=https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20211005-no-lovers-allowed-in-top-french-book-prize-after-ethics-scandal |access-date=4 November 2021}}</ref>

== Selection and voting process ==
The Prix Goncourt is divided into three selection stages. The first selection is typically composed of fifteen finalists. The second selection is typically composed of eight finalists, narrowed down from the previous fifteen. A third and final selection leaves four finalists.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Prix Goncourt – Présentation |url=https://www.academiegoncourt.com/presentation-prix-goncourt |access-date=7 November 2021 |website=[[Académie Goncourt]] |language=fr}}</ref>

In the voting rounds, a maximum of fourteen rounds can be carried out. To begin the deliberation process, the names of the four finalists are placed in a champagne bucket. In turn, the names are taken out and each member of the jury votes aloud in favour of, or in opposition to, the writer. An absolute majority—more than half the votes cast—is required until the tenth round, then a [[Plurality (voting)|simple majority]] is sufficient to designate a winner. If, after fourteen rounds, there is no winner, the president's vote counts as double to determine a majority vote. At 12:45{{nbsp}}p.m., the Secretary General, currently [[Philippe Claudel]], appears in front of the crowd of journalists and announces the winner. The winner typically waits in a cafe near the ''Drouant'' so that they can arrive in time. The winner is interviewed by the media and is offered a symbolic check for ten euros.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Carreau |first=Nicolas |date=3 November 2021 |title=Goncourt : comment est remis le prix et qui est le favori cette année ? |url=https://www.europe1.fr/culture/goncourt-comment-est-remis-le-prix-et-qui-est-le-favori-cette-annee-4074896 |access-date=7 November 2021 |website=[[Europe 1]] |language=fr}}</ref>

== Winners ==
{| class="wikitable sortable" align="top"
|+ Prix Goncourt winners<ref>{{Cite web |title=Tous les lauréats |url=https://www.academiegoncourt.com/tous-les-laureats-prix-goncourt |access-date=7 November 2021 |website=[[Académie Goncourt]] |language=fr}}</ref>
|-
! Year
!
! Author
! French title
! English title
! Transl. year
! Film title
! Film year
! Notes
! Publisher (x time)
|-
| 1903
| [[File:John-Antoine Nau.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Nau, John Antoine |[[John Antoine Nau]]}}
| ''Force ennemie''
| ''[[Force ennemie|Enemy Force]]'' || 2010
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| [[La Plume]]
|-
| 1904
| [[File:Léon Frapié.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Frapié, Léon |[[Léon Frapié]]}}
| ''[[La Maternelle]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| ''[[La Maternelle (film)|La Maternelle]]''
| 1933
|
| [[Éditions Albin Michel|Albin Michel]]
|-
| 1905
| [[File:Claude Farrère 1923.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Farrère, Claude |[[Claude Farrère]]}}
| ''[[Les Civilisés]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Paul Ollendorff
|-
| 1906
| [[File:Jean et Jérôme Tharaud 1923.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Tharaud, Jérôme|[[Jean Tharaud|Jean]] and [[Jérôme Tharaud]]}}
| ''[[Dingley, l'illustre écrivain]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Édouard Pelletan
|-
| 1907
| [[File:Emile Moselly-01.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Moselly, Émile |[[Émile Moselly]]}}
| ''[[Le Rouet d'ivoire]]'' and ''[[Jean des Brebis ou le livre de la misère]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{refn|Pseudonym of [[Émile Chénin]]|group=n}}
| [[Plon (publisher)|Plon]]
|-
| 1908
| [[File:Francis de Miomandre.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Miomandre, Francis de |[[Francis de Miomandre]]}}
| ''[[Écrit sur de l'eau...]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Édition du Feu, later Émile-Paul Frères
|-
| 1909
| [[File:Touche à tout 1910 Ary et Marius Leblond par Henri Manuel.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Leblond, Marius-Ary |{{nowrap|[[Marius-Ary Leblond]]}}}}
| ''[[En France]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Fasquelle
|-
| 1910
| [[File:Louis Pergaud.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Pergaud, Louis |[[Louis Pergaud]]}}
| ''[[De Goupil à Margot]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| [[Mercure de France]]
|-
| 1911
| [[File:Chateaubriant, Alphonse.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Chateaubriant, Alphonse de |[[Alphonse de Châteaubriant]]}}
| ''Monsieur des Lourdines''
| ''[[The Keynote (novel)|The Keynote]]''
| 1912
| ''[[Monsieur des Lourdines]]''
| 1943
|
| [[Éditions Grasset|Grasset]]
|-
| 1912
|
| {{sort |Savignon, André |[[André Savignon]]}}
| ''[[Les Filles de la pluie]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Grasset <small>(2)</small>
|-
| 1913
|
| {{sort |Elder, Marc |[[Marc Elder]]}}
| ''[[Le peuple de la mer]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| [[Calmann-Lévy]]
|-
| 1914
|
| {{sort |Bertrand, Adrien |[[Adrien Bertrand]]}}
| ''L'Appel du Sol''
| ''[[The Call of the Soil]]''
| 1919
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{refn|Awarded in 1916. See footnote.<ref name="two-awards" />|group=n}}
| Calmann-Lévy <small>(2)</small>
|-
| 1915
|
| {{sort |Benjamin, René |[[René Benjamin]]}}
| ''Gaspard''
| ''[[Private Gaspard]]''
| 1916
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| [[Fayard]]
|-
| 1916
| [[File:Henri-Barbusse.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Barbusse, Henri |[[Henri Barbusse]]}}
| ''Le Feu''
| ''[[Under Fire (Barbusse novel)|Under Fire]]''
| 1917
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{refn|See footnote.<ref name="two-awards">No award was given in 1914 due to the war. In 1916 two awards were given, one for 1916 (Barbusse) and one for 1914 (Bertrand).</ref>|group=n}}
| [[Groupe Flammarion|Flammarion]]
|-
| 1917
| [[File:Henry Malherbe.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Malherbe, Henry |[[Henry Malherbe]]}}
| ''La Flamme au poing''
| ''[[The Flame That Is France]]''
| 1918
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Albin Michel <small>(2)</small>
|-
| 1918
| [[File:Georges Duhamel 1930.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Duhamel, Georges |[[Georges Duhamel]]}}
| ''Civilisation''
| ''Civilization''
| 1919
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Mercure de France <small>(2)</small>
|-
| 1919
| [[File:Marcel Proust 1895.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Proust, Marcel |[[Marcel Proust]]}}
| ''A l'ombre des jeunes filles en fleurs''
| ''[[Within a Budding Grove]]''
| 1920
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{refn|Volume 2 of ''[[In Search of Lost Time]]''|group=n}}
| Gallimard
|-
| 1920
|
| {{sort |Pérochon, Ernest |[[Ernest Pérochon]]}}
| ''Nêne''
| ''[[Nêne]]''
| 1920
| ''[[Nène (film)|Nène]]''<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0015186/ ''Nène''] at [[IMDb]]</ref>
| 1924
|
| Plon <small>(2)</small>
|-
| 1921
| [[File:René Maran-1930.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Maran, René |[[René Maran]]}}
| ''Batouala''
| ''[[Batouala (novel)|Batouala]]''
| 1921
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Albin Michel <small>(3)</small>
|-
| 1922
| [[File:Henri Béraud.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Béraud, Henri |[[Henri Béraud]]}}
| ''[[Le vitriol de la lune]]'' and ''[[Le martyre de l'obèse]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Albin Michel <small>(4)</small>
|-
| 1923
| [[File:Fabre, Lucien (1889-1952) -- Portraits (cropped).JPEG|40px]]
| {{sort |Fabre, L. |[[Lucien Fabre]]}}
| ''[[Rabevel ou Le mal des ardents]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(2)</small>
|-
| 1924
| [[File:Thierry Sandre, photographie agence Rol, 1924.png|40px]]
| {{sort |Sandre, Thierry |[[Thierry Sandre]]}}
| ''[[Le Chèvrefeuille, le Purgatoire, le Chapitre XIII]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(3)</small>
|-
| 1925
| [[File:MG Portrait au trait.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Genevoix, Maurice |[[Maurice Genevoix]]}}
| ''[[Raboliot]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| ''[[Raboliot (1946 film)|Raboliot]]''<br />''[[Raboliot (1972 TV)|Raboliot]]''<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0335367/ Raboliot] at [[IMDb]]</ref><br />''[[Raboliot (2008 TV)|Raboliot]]''<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1185008/ Raboliot] at [[IMDb]]</ref>
| 1946<br />1972<br />2008
|
| Grasset <small>(3)</small>
|-
| 1926
| [[File:Henri Deberly redux.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Deberly, H. |[[Henri Deberly]]}}
| {{nowrap|''[[Le supplice de Phèdre]]''}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(4)</small>
|-
| 1927
| [[File:Maurice Bedel 1927.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Bedel, Maurice |[[Maurice Bedel]]}}
| ''Jérôme 60° latitude nord''
| ''[[Jerome (novel)|Jerome: or, The Latitude of Love]]''
| 1928
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(5)</small>
|-
| 1928
|
| {{sort |Constantin-Weyer, Maurice |[[Maurice Constantin-Weyer]]}}
| ''Un Homme se penche sur son passé''
| ''{{nowrap|[[A Man Scans His Past]]}}''
| 1929
| ''[[Un homme se penche sur son passé]]''<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0138152/ ''Un homme se penche sur son passé''] at [[IMDb]]</ref><br />''[[Les amants de rivière rouge]]''<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0194621/ ''Les amants de rivière rouge''] at [[IMDb]]</ref>
| 1958<br />1996
|
| Rieder
|-
| 1929
| [[File:Marcel Arland - 1929.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Arland, Marcel |[[Marcel Arland]]}}
| ''[[L'Ordre (novel)|L'Ordre]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| ''[[L'Ordre (1985 TV)|L'Ordre]]''<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0278609/ ''L'Ordre''] at [[IMDb]]</ref>
| 1985
|
| Gallimard <small>(6)</small>
|-
| 1930
| [[File:Henri Fauconnier redux.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Fauconnier, H. |[[Henri Fauconnier|H. Fauconnier]]}}
| ''Malaisie''
| ''[[The Soul of Malaya]]'' or ''[[Malaisie (novel)|Malaisie]]''
| 1931
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| [[Stock (publishing house)|Stock]]
|-
| 1931
| [[File:Jean Fayard redux.JPG|40px]]
| {{sort |Fayard, Jean |[[Jean Fayard]]}}
| ''Mal d'amour''
| ''[[Desire (novel)|Desire]]''
| 1931
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Fayard <small>(2)</small>
|-
| 1932
| [[File:Guy Mazeline 1932.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Mazeline, Guy |[[Guy Mazeline]]}}
| ''Les Loups''
| ''[[The Wolves (novel)|The Wolves]]''
| 1935
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(7)</small>
|-
| 1933
| [[File:André Malraux redux.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Malraux, André |[[André Malraux]]}}
| ''La Condition humaine''
| ''[[Man's Fate]]''
| 1934
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(8)</small>
|-
| 1934
| [[File:Roger Vercel 1934.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Vercel, Roger |[[Roger Vercel]]}}
| ''Capitaine Conan''
| ''[[Captain Conan]]''
| 1935
| ''[[Capitaine Conan]]''
| 1996
|
| Albin Michel <small>(5)</small>
|-
| 1935
| [[File:Joseph Peyré 1935.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Peyre, Joseph |[[Joseph Peyre]]}}
| ''[[Sang et Lumières]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Grasset <small>(4)</small>
|-
| 1936
| [[File:Maxence Van der Meersch 1936.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Van Der Meersch, Maxence |[[Maxence Van Der Meersch]]}}
| ''L'Empreinte de Dieu''
| ''[[Hath Not the Potter]]''
| 1937
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Albin Michel <small>(6)</small>
|-
| 1937
|
| {{sort |Plisnier, Charles |[[Charles Plisnier]]}}
| ''[[Faux passeports]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{refn|First foreigner to win Prix Goncourt.|group=n}}
| Corrêa
|-
| 1938
| [[File:Troyat Harcourt 1943.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Troyat, Henri |[[Henri Troyat]]}}
| ''[[L'Araigne]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Plon <small>(3)</small>
|-
| 1939
| [[File:Philippe Heriat redux.JPG|40px]]
| {{sort |Hériat, Philippe |[[Philippe Hériat]]}}
| ''[[Les enfants gâtés]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(9)</small>
|-
| 1940
|
| {{sort |Ambrière, Francis |[[Francis Ambrière]]}}
| ''Les grandes vacances''
| ''[[The Long Holiday]]''
| 1948
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{refn|Published and awarded in 1946 due to WWII.<br />Non-fiction memoir.|group=n}}
| Nouvelle France
|-
| 1941
| [[File:Henri Pourrat, le Vernet, 1954.png|40px]]
| {{sort |Pourrat Henri |[[Henri Pourrat]]}}
| ''[[Vent de Mars]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(10)</small>
|-
| 1942
| [[File:Marc Bernard 1934.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Bernard, Marc |[[Marc Bernard]]}}
| ''[[Pareil à des enfants]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(11)</small>
|-
| 1943
|
| {{sort |Grout, Marius |[[Marius Grout]]}}
| ''Passage de l'Homme''
| ''[[When the Man Passed By]]''
| 1962
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(12)</small>
|-
| 1944
| [[File:Elsa-triolet-1925.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Triolet, Elsa |[[Elsa Triolet]]}}
| ''Le premier accroc coûte 200 Francs''
| ''[[A Fine of Two Hundred Francs]]''
| 1947
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| [[Éditions Denoël|Denoël]]
|-
| 1945
| [[File:Jean-Louis Bory redux.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Bory, Jean-Louis |[[Jean-Louis Bory]]}}
| ''[[Mon village à l'heure allemande]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Flammarion <small>(2)</small>
|-
| 1946
|
| {{sort |Gautier, Jean-Jacques |[[Jean-Jacques Gautier]]}}
| ''[[Histoire d'un Fait divers]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| [[Éditions Julliard|Julliard]]
|-
| 1947
| [[File:Curtis Harcourt 1947 2.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Curtis, Jean-Louis |[[Jean-Louis Curtis]]}}
| ''Les Forêts de la Nuit''
| ''[[The Forests of the Night]]''
| 1950
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Julliard <small>(2)</small>
|-
| 1948
| [[File:Maurice Druon redux.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Druon, Maurice |[[Maurice Druon]]}}
| ''Les grandes familles''
| ''[[The Rise of Simon Lachaume]]''
| 1952
| ''[[The Possessors]]''<br>''[[Les grandes familles (1989 TV)|Les grandes familles]]''<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0096600/ ''Les grandes familles''] at [[IMDb]]</ref>
| 1958<br>1989
|
| Julliard <small>(3)</small>
|-
| 1949
| [[File:Robert Merle (1964).JPG|40px]]
| {{sort |Merle, Robert |[[Robert Merle]]}}
| ''Week-end à Zuydcoote''
| ''[[Week-end at Zuydcoote]]''
| 1950
| ''[[Weekend at Dunkirk]]''
| 1964
|
| Gallimard <small>(13)</small>
|-
| 1950
|
| {{sort |Colin, Paul |[[Paul Colin (writer)|Paul Colin]]}}
| ''Les jeux sauvages''
| ''[[Savage Play (novel)|Savage Play]]''
| 1953
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(14)</small>
|-
| 1951
|
| {{sort |Gracq, Julien |[[Julien Gracq]]}}
| ''Le Rivage des Syrtes''
| ''[[The Opposing Shore]]''
| 1986
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{refn|Refused prize.|group=n}}
| [[José Corti]]
|-
| 1952
|
| {{sort |Beck, Béatrix |[[Béatrix Beck]]}}
| ''Léon Morin, prêtre''
| ''[[The Priest (novel)|The Priest]]'' (UK), ''[[The Passionate Heart]]'' (US)
| 1953
| ''[[Léon Morin, Priest]]''<br />''[[Léon Morin, prêtre (1991 TV)|Léon Morin, prêtre]]''<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0251811/ ''Léon Morin, prêtre''] at [[IMDb]]</ref>
| 1961<br />1991
|
| Gallimard <small>(15)</small>
|-
| 1953
|
| {{sort |Gascar, Pierre |[[Pierre Gascar]]}}
| ''[[Les Bêtes]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(16)</small>
|-
| 1954
| [[File:Simone de Beauvoir2.png|40px]]
| {{sort |Beauvoir, Simone de |[[Simone de Beauvoir]]}}
| ''Les Mandarins''
| ''[[The Mandarins]]''
| 1957
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(17)</small>
|-
| 1955
|
| {{sort |Ikor, Roger |[[Roger Ikor]]}}
| ''[[Les eaux mêlées]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| ''[[Les eaux mêlées (1969 TV)|Les eaux mêlées]]''<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0302520/ ''Les eaux mêlées''] at [[IMDb]]</ref>
| 1969
|
| Albin Michel <small>(7)</small>
|-
| 1956
|
| {{sort |Gary, Romain |[[Romain Gary]]}}
| ''Les racines du ciel''
| ''[[The Roots of Heaven (novel)|The Roots of Heaven]]''
| 1957
| ''[[The Roots of Heaven (film)|The Roots of Heaven]]''
| 1958
|
| Gallimard <small>(18)</small>
|-
| 1957
|
| {{sort |Vailland, Roger |[[Roger Vailland]]}}
| ''La Loi''
| ''[[The Law (1957 novel)|The Law]]''
| 1958
| ''[[The Law (1959 film)|The Law]]''
| 1959
|
| Gallimard <small>(19)</small>
|-
| 1958
|
| {{sort |Walder, Francis |[[Francis Walder]]}}
| ''[[Saint-Germain ou la négociation]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(20)</small>
|-
| 1959
|
| {{sort |Schwarz-Bart, André |[[André Schwarz-Bart]]}}
| ''Le dernier des Justes''
| ''[[The Last of the Just]]''
| 1960
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| [[Éditions du Seuil|Seuil]]
|-
| 1960
|
| {{sort |Horia, Vintilă |[[Vintilă Horia]]}}
| ''Dieu est né en exil''
| ''[[God Was Born in Exile]]''
| 1961
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Fayard <small>(3)</small>
|-
| 1961
|
| {{sort |Cau, Jean |[[Jean Cau (writer)|Jean Cau]]}}
| ''La pitié de Dieu''
| ''[[The Mercy of God]]''
| 1963
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(21)</small>
|-
| 1962
| [[File:Anna Langfus.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Langfus, Anna |[[Anna Langfus]]}}
| ''Les bagages de sable''
| ''[[The Lost Shore]]''
| 1964
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(22)</small>
|-
| 1963
|
| {{sort |Lanoux, Armand |[[Armand Lanoux]]}}
| ''[[Quand la mer se retire]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| ''[[Quand la mer se retire (1963 TV)|Quand la mer se retire]]''<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0414421/ ''Quand la mer se retire''] at [[IMDb]]</ref>
| 1963
|
| Julliard <small>(4)</small>
|-
| 1964
| [[File:Georges conchon.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Conchon, Georges |[[Georges Conchon]]}}
| ''[[L'Etat sauvage]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| ''[[The Savage State]]''
| 1978
|
| Albin Michel <small>(8)</small>
|-
| 1965
|
| {{sort |Borel, Jacques |[[Jacques Borel]]}}
| ''L'Adoration''
| ''[[The Bond (novel)|The Bond]]''
| 1968
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(23)</small>
|-
| 1966
| [[File:Edmonde Charles-Roux redux.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Charles-Roux, Edmonde |[[Edmonde Charles-Roux]]}}
| ''Oublier Palerme''
| ''[[To Forget Palermo]]''
| 1968
| ''[[Dimenticare Palermo]]''
| 1990
|
| Grasset <small>(5)</small>
|-
| 1967
|
| {{sort |Mandiargues, André Pieyre de |[[André Pieyre de Mandiargues]]}}
| ''La Marge''
| ''[[The Margin (novel)|The Margin]]''
| 1970
| ''[[The Margin (film)|The Margin]]''
| 1976
|
| Gallimard <small>(24)</small>
|-
| 1968
|
| {{sort |Clavel, Bernard |[[Bernard Clavel]]}}
| ''Les fruits de l'hiver''
| ''[[The Fruits of Winter]]''
| 1969
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| [[Éditions Robert Laffont|Robert Laffont]]
|-
| 1969
|
| {{sort |Marceau Félicien |[[Félicien Marceau]]}}
| ''Creezy''
| ''[[Creezy]]''
| 1970
| ''[[Creezy (film)|Creezy]]''
| 1974
|
| Gallimard <small>(25)</small>
|-
| 1970
| [[File:Michel Tournier cropped.JPG|40px]]
| {{sort |Tournier Michel |[[Michel Tournier]]}}
| ''Le Roi des Aulnes''
| ''[[The Erl-King (novel)|The Erl-King]]'' (UK) or ''[[The Ogre (novel)|The Ogre]]'' (US)
| 1972
| ''[[The Ogre (1996 film)|The Ogre]]''
| 1996
|
| Gallimard <small>(26)</small>
|-
| 1971
|
| {{sort |Laurent Jacques |[[Jacques Laurent]]}}
| ''[[Les Bêtises (novel)|Les Bêtises]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Grasset <small>(6)</small>
|-
| 1972
| [[File:Jean Carriere.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Carrière Jean |[[Jean Carrière]]}}
| ''[[L'Epervier de Maheux]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Pauvert
|-
| 1973
| [[File:Jacques Chessex.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Chessex Jacques |[[Jacques Chessex]]}}
| ''L<nowiki>'</nowiki>Ogre''
| ''[[A Father's Love (novel)|A Father's Love]]'' (1975) or ''The Tyrant'' (2012)
| 1975
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{refn|The translated editions from 1975 & 2012 are the same by Martin Sokolinsky.|group=n}}
| Grasset <small>(7)</small>
|-
| 1974
|
| {{sort |Lainé, Pascal |[[Pascal Lainé]]}}
| ''La Dentellière''
| ''[[La Dentellière|A Web of Lace]]'' (1976) or ''[[La Dentellière|The Lacemaker]]'' (2008)<ref>Translated by David Dugan. [http://www.thedirtygoat.com/backissues/dg18.html ''The Dirty Goat'', issue 18, pg. 170] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090614222535/http://www.thedirtygoat.com/backissues/dg18.html |date=14 June 2009 }}.</ref>
| 1976
| ''[[The Lacemaker]]''
| 1977
|
| Gallimard <small>(27)</small>
|-
| 1975
|
| {{sort |Ajar, Emile |[[Émile Ajar]]}} ([[Romain Gary]])
| ''La vie devant soi''
| ''[[Momo (1975 novel)|Momo]]'' (1978) or ''[[The Life Before Us]]'' (1986)
| 1978
| ''[[Madame Rosa]]''<br>''[[The Life Ahead]]''
| 1977<br>2020
| {{refn|The rules of the Prix Goncourt state that an author can win only once. Gary had already won in 1956 for ''[[Les racines du ciel]]''. However, since ''[[La vie devant soi]]'' was published under the pseudonym Émile Ajar, the Académie Goncourt awarded the prize without knowing the author's true identity. Gary's cousin's son Paul Pavlowitch posed as the author for a time.|group=n}}
| Mercure de France <small>(3)</small>
|-
| 1976
| [[File:Patrick Grainville01.JPG|40px]]
| {{sort |Grainville, Patrick |[[Patrick Grainville]]}}
| ''[[Les Flamboyants]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Seuil <small>(2)</small>
|-
| 1977
| [[File:Réception de Patrice Franceschi comme Écrivain de Marine le 10 février 2014 à l'Hôtel de la Marine à Paris - 20.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Decoin, Didier |[[Didier Decoin]]}}
| ''[[John l'enfer]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Seuil <small>(3)</small>
|-
| 1978
| [[File:Patrick Modiano 6 dec 2014 - 23.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Modiano, Patrick |[[Patrick Modiano]]}}
| ''Rue des boutiques obscures''
| ''[[Missing Person (novel)|Missing Person]]''
| 1980
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(28)</small>
|-
| 1979
| [[File:Antonine Maillet redux.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Maillet, Antonine |[[Antonine Maillet]]}}
| ''Pélagie-la-Charrette''
| ''[[Pélagie: The Return to Acadie]]''
| 1982
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Grasset <small>(8)</small>
|-
| 1980
| [[File:Yves Navarre redux.png|40px]]
| {{sort |Navarre, Yves |[[Yves Navarre]]}}
| ''Le Jardin d'acclimatation''
| ''[[Cronus' Children]]''
| 1986
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Flammarion <small>(3)</small>
|-
| 1981
|
| {{sort |Bodard, Lucien |[[Lucien Bodard]]}}
| ''[[Anne-Marie (novel)|Anne-Marie]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Grasset <small>(9)</small>
|-
| 1982
| [[File:Dominique Fernandez redux.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Fernandez, Dominique |[[Dominique Fernandez]]}}
| ''[[Dans la main de l'Ange]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Grasset <small>(10)</small>
|-
| 1983
|
| {{sort |Tristan, Frédérick |[[Frédérick Tristan]]}}
| ''Les égarés''
| ''[[The Lost Ones (Tristan)|The Lost Ones]]''
| 1991
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Balland
|-
| 1984
| [[File:Marguerite Duras 1993.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Duras, Marguerite |[[Marguerite Duras]]}}
| ''L'Amant''
| ''[[The Lover (Duras novel)|The Lover]]''
| 1986
| ''[[The Lover (1992 film)|The Lover]]''
| 1992
|
| [[Les Éditions de Minuit|Minuit]]
|-
| 1985
| [[File:Yann Queféllec 2013 a.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Queffelec, Yann |[[Yann Queffélec]]}}
| ''Les Noces barbares''
| ''[[The Wedding (Queffélec)|The Wedding]]''
| 1987
| ''[[The Cruel Embrace]]''
| 1987
|
| Gallimard <small>(29)</small>
|-
| 1986
|
| {{sort |Host, Michel |[[Michel Host]]}}
| ''[[Valet de nuit]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Grasset <small>(11)</small>
|-
| 1987
| [[File:Tahar Ben Jelloun redux.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Jelloun, Tahar ben |[[Tahar Ben Jelloun]]}}
| ''La nuit sacrée''
| ''[[The Sacred Night]]''
| 1989
| ''[[La Nuit sacrée (film)|La Nuit sacrée]]''<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0107714/ ''La Nuit sacrée''] at [[IMDb]]</ref>
| 1993
|
| Seuil <small>(4)</small>
|-
| 1988
| [[File:Cohen-Solal Mutualite 2008 03 03 n3.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Orsenna Erik |[[Érik Orsenna]]}}
| ''L'Exposition coloniale''
| ''[[Love and Empire]]''
| 1991
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Seuil <small>(5)</small>
|-
| 1989
|
| {{sort |Vautrin, Jean |[[Jean Vautrin]]}}
| ''[[Un grand pas vers le Bon Dieu]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Grasset <small>(12)</small>
|-
| 1990
| [[File:Jean Rouaud (2015).png|40px]]
| {{sort |Rouaud, Jean |[[Jean Rouaud]]}}
| ''Les Champs d'honneur''
| ''[[Fields of Glory (novel)|Fields of Glory]]''
| 1992
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Minuit <small>(2)</small>
|-
| 1991
|
| {{sort |Combescot, Pierre |[[Pierre Combescot]]}}
| ''[[Les Filles du Calvaire]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Grasset <small>(13)</small>
|-
| 1992
| [[File:Patrick Chamoiseau redux.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Chamoiseau, Patrick |[[Patrick Chamoiseau]]}}
| ''Texaco''
| ''[[Texaco (novel)|Texaco]]''
| 1998
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(30)</small>
|-
| 1993
| [[File:Amin Maalouf par Claude Truong-Ngoc novembre 2013.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Maalouf, Amin |[[Amin Maalouf]]}}
| ''Le Rocher de Tanios''
| ''[[The Rock of Tanios]]''
| 1994
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Grasset <small>(14)</small>
|-
| 1994
| [[File:Paris - Salon du livre 2013 - Didier Van Cauwelaert - 001.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Cauwelaert, Didier Van |[[Didier Van Cauwelaert]]}}
| ''Un Aller simple''
| ''[[One-Way]]''
| 2003
| ''[[Un aller simple (2001 film)|One Way Ticket]]''<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0242981/ ''One Way Ticket''] at [[IMDb]]</ref>
| 2001
|
| Albin Michel <small>(9)</small>
|-
| 1995
| [[File:Andrei Makine.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Makine Andreï |[[Andreï Makine]]}}
| ''Le Testament français''
| ''[[Dreams of My Russian Summers]]''
| 1998
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Mercure de France <small>(4)</small>
|-
| 1996
| [[File:Pascale Roze (2014).png|40px]]
| {{sort |Roze, Pascale|[[Pascale Roze]]}}
| ''[[Le Chasseur Zéro]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Albin Michel <small>(10)</small>
|-
| 1997
| [[File:Patrick Rambaud 2010 a.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Rambaud, Patrick |[[Patrick Rambaud]]}}
| ''La Bataille''
| ''[[The Battle (Rambaud novel)|The Battle]]''
| 2000
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Grasset <small>(15)</small>
|-
| 1998
| [[File:Paule Constant par Claude Truong-Ngoc sept 2013.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Constant, Paule |[[Paule Constant]]}}
| ''Confidence pour confidence''
| ''[[Trading Secrets]]''
| 2001
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(31)</small>
|-
| 1999
| [[File:Jean Echenoz (2016).png|40px]]
| {{sort |Echenoz, Jean |[[Jean Echenoz]]}}
| ''Je m'en vais''
| ''[[I'm Gone (novel)|I'm Gone]]'' (US) or ''[[I'm Off]]'' (UK)
| 2001
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Minuit <small>(3)</small>
|-
| 2000
|
| {{sort |Schuhl, Jean-Jacques |[[Jean-Jacques Schuhl]]}}
| ''Ingrid Caven''
| ''[[Ingrid Caven (novel)|Ingrid Caven]]''
| 2004
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(32)</small>
|-
| 2001
| [[File:Jean-Christophe Rufin par Claude Truong-Ngoc octobre 2013.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Rufin, Jean-Christophe |[[Jean-Christophe Rufin]]}}
| ''Rouge Brésil''
| ''[[Brazil Red]]''
| 2004
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(33)</small>
|-
| 2002
| [[File:Pascal Quignard le 5 avril 2013.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Quignard, Pascal |[[Pascal Quignard]]}}
| ''Les Ombres errantes''
| ''[[The Roving Shadows]]''
| 2011
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Grasset <small>(16)</small>
|-
| 2003
|
| {{sort |Amette, Jacques-Pierre |[[Jacques-Pierre Amette]]}}
| ''La maîtresse de Brecht''
| ''[[Brecht's Lover]]'' (US) or ''[[Brecht's Mistress]]'' (UK)
| 2005
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Albin Michel <small>(11)</small>
|-
| 2004
| [[File:Laurent Gaudé redux.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Gaudé, Laurent |[[Laurent Gaudé]]}}
| ''Le Soleil des Scorta''
| ''[[The House of Scorta]]'' (US 2006) ''[[The Scortas' Sun]]'' (UK 2007)
| 2006
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| [[Actes Sud]]
|-
| 2005
|
| {{sort |Weyergans, François |[[François Weyergans]]}}
| ''[[Trois jours chez ma mère]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Grasset <small>(17)</small>
|-
| 2006
| [[File:Jonathan Littell redux.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Littell, Jonathan |[[Jonathan Littell]]}}
| ''Les Bienveillantes''
| ''[[The Kindly Ones (Littell novel)|The Kindly Ones]]''
| 2009
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(34)</small>
|-
| 2007
| [[File:Gilles Leroy redux.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Leroy, Gilles |[[Gilles Leroy]]}}
| ''[[Alabama Song (novel)|Alabama Song]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Mercure de France <small>(5)</small>
|-
| 2008
| [[File:Atiq Rahimi 2010 a.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Rahimi, Atiq|[[Atiq Rahimi]]}}
| ''Syngué Sabour: La pierre de patience''
| ''[[Stone of Patience]]'' (UK) or ''[[The Patience Stone]]'' (US)
| 2010
| ''[[The Patience Stone (film)|The Patience Stone]]''
| 2012
|
| P.O.L
|-
| 2009
| [[File:Gutenbergpresse Marie-NDiaye 07-Portrait.JPG|40px]]
| {{sort |NDiaye, Marie|[[Marie NDiaye]]}}
| ''Trois femmes puissantes''
| ''[[Three Strong Women]]''
| 2012
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(35)</small>
|-
| 2010
| [[File:Michel Houellebecq no Fronteiras do Pensamento Porto Alegre 2016 (30895029365) (cropped).jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Houellebecq, Michel|[[Michel Houellebecq]]}}
| ''La Carte et le territoire''
| {{nowrap|''[[The Map and the Territory]]''}}
| 2012
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Flammarion <small>(4)</small>
|-
| 2011
| [[File:Alexis Jenni redux.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort |Jenni, Alexis|[[Alexis Jenni]]}}
| ''L'Art français de la guerre''
| ''[[The French Art of War]]''
| 2017
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(36)</small>
|-
| 2012
| [[File:Jérôme Ferrari 2010 (crop).jpg|40px]]
| {{sort| Ferrari, Jérôme|[[Jérôme Ferrari]]}}
| ''Le Sermon sur la chute de Rome''
| ''[[The Sermon on the Fall of Rome]]''
| 2014
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Actes Sud <small>(2)</small>
|-
| 2013
| [[File:Pierre Lemaitre — Salon du livre de Paris - 23 mars 2014 recadrée.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort| Lemaitre, Pierre|[[Pierre Lemaitre]]}}
| ''Au revoir là-haut''
| ''[[The Great Swindle (novel)|The Great Swindle]]''
| 2015
| ''[[See You Up There (film)|See You Up There]]''
| 2017
|
| Albin Michel <small>(12)</small>
|-
| 2014
| [[File:Lydie Salvayre redux.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort| Salvayre, Lydie|[[Lydie Salvayre]]}}
| ''Pas pleurer''
| ''[[Cry, Mother Spain]]''
| 2016
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Seuil <small>(6)</small>
|-
| 2015
| [[File:Paris - Salon du livre 2013 - Mathias Énard - 005.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort|Énard, Mathias|[[Mathias Énard]]}}
| ''Boussole''
| ''[[Compass (novel)|Compass]]''
| 2017
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Actes Sud <small>(3)</small>
|-
| 2016
| [[File:Leïla Slimani no Fronteiras do Pensamento São Paulo 2018 (42891129632).jpg|40px]]
| {{sort|Slimani, Leïla|[[Leïla Slimani]]}}
| ''Chanson douce''
| ''[[Lullaby (Slimani novel)|Lullaby]]'' (UK)<br>''The Perfect Nanny'' (USA)
| 2018
| ''[[Perfect Nanny (film)|Perfect Nanny]]''
| 2019
|
| Gallimard <small>(37)</small>
|-
| 2017
| [[File:VUILLARD-J16-bertini-1002405.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort|Vuillard, Éric|[[Éric Vuillard]]}}
| ''L'Ordre du jour''
| ''[[The Order of the Day]]''
| 2018
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Actes Sud <small>(4)</small>
|-
| 2018
| [[File:Nicolas Mathieu redux.jpg|40px]]
| {{sort|Mathieu, Nicolas|[[Nicolas Mathieu (writer)|Nicolas Mathieu]]}}
| ''Leurs enfants après eux''
| ''[[And Their Children After Them (novel)|And Their Children After Them]]''
| 2019
| ''[[And Their Children After Them (film)|And Their Children After Them]]''
| 2024
|
| Actes Sud <small>(5)</small>
|-
| 2019
| [[File:Jean-Paul Dubois (2016) - 2.png|40px]]
| {{sort|Dubois, Jean-Paul|[[Jean-Paul Dubois]]}}
| ''Tous les hommes n'habitent pas le monde de la même façon''
| ''[[Not Everybody Lives the Same Way]]''
| 2022
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| [[Éditions de l'Olivier|L'Olivier]]
|-
| 2020
| [[File:Hervé Le Tellier (2021).png|40px]]
| {{sort|Tellier, Hervé|[[Hervé Le Tellier]]}}
| ''L'Anomalie''
| ''[[The Anomaly (novel)|The Anomaly]]''
| 2021
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
| Gallimard <small>(38)</small>
|-
| 2021
| [[File:Mohamed Mbougar Sarr (2021).png|40px]]
| {{sort|Mbougar Sarr, Mohamed|[[Mohamed Mbougar Sarr]]}}
| ''La plus secrète mémoire des hommes''
| ''[[The Most Secret Memory of Men]]''
| 2023
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{refn|First winner of the Goncourt from Sub-Saharan Africa<ref>{{Cite news |date=3 November 2021 |title=Mohamed Mbougar Sarr wins Goncourt Prize, France's most prestigious literary award |language=en |work=[[France 24]] |url=https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20211103-mohamed-mbougar-sarr-wins-goncourt-prize-france-s-most-prestigious-literary-award |access-date=3 November 2021}}</ref>|group=n}}
| Philippe Rey / Jimsaan
|-
|2022
| [[File:Brigitte Giraud (2017).png|40px]]
| [[Brigitte Giraud]]
| ''[[Vivre Vite]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
|Flammarion <small>(5)</small>
|-
|2023
| [[File:Fnac Forum 2017 (37284503615).jpg|40px]]
| [[Jean-Baptiste Andrea]]
| ''Veiller sur elle''
| ''[[Watching Over Her]]''
| 2025
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
|L'Iconoclaste <small>(1)</small>
|-
|2024
| [[File:Kamel Daoud par Claude Truong-Ngoc février 2015.jpg|40px]]
| [[Kamel Daoud]]
| ''[[Houris (novel)|Houris]]''
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
| {{n/a}}
|
|Gallimard <small>(39)</small>
|-
|}

==Other awards==
In addition to the Prix Goncourt for a novel, the Academy awards four other awards, for first novel, short story, biography and poetry.

As of March 2009, the académie changed the award name by dropping "bourses" ("scholarship") from the title.<ref>[https://www.academiegoncourt.com/?rubrique=1229172185 Autres prix décernés par l'Académie Goncourt]</ref><ref>[http://www.lefigaro.fr/livres/2009/01/29/03005-20090129ARTFIG00477-les-goncourt-surfent-.php Les Goncourt surfent], ''[[Le Figaro]]'', 29 January 2009</ref> The prefix "prix" can be included or not, such as "Prix Goncourt de la Poésie" (Goncourt prize for Poetry) or "Goncourt de la Poésie" (Goncourt of Poetry). For example: "Claude Vigée was awarded a Goncourt de la Poésie in 2008". Or, "Claude Vigée won the 2008 prix Goncourt de la Poésie".

The award titles are:

{| class="wikitable"
!Pre-2009 award name
!Post-2009 award name
!Category
|-
|Bourse Goncourt de la Biographie
|Prix Goncourt de la Biographie
|[[Biography]]
|-
|Bourse Goncourt de la Nouvelle
|Prix Goncourt de la Nouvelle
|[[Short story]]
|-
|Bourse Goncourt du Premier Roman
|Prix Goncourt du Premier Roman
|[[Debut novel]]
|-
|Bourse Goncourt de la Poésie
|Prix Goncourt de la Poésie
|[[Poetry]]
|-
|Bourse Goncourt Jeunesse
|discontinued
|[[Children's literature|Juvenile]]
|}

The winners are listed below.<ref>[https://www.academiegoncourt.com/?article=1229180726 Autres prix décernés par l'Académie Goncourt: Lauréats]</ref>

==={{anchor|Prix Goncourt de la Biographie}} Prix Goncourt de la Biographie ===
Goncourt Prize for biography. Awarded in partnership with the city of [[Nancy, France|Nancy]]. The prize was renamed officially in 2017 the ''Prix Goncourt de la Biographie [[Edmonde Charles-Roux]]'', after a former president of the Goncourt Academy.
{{div col}}
*1980 – [[Jean Lacouture]], ''François Mauriac''
*1981 – [[Hubert Juin]], ''Victor Hugo''
*1982 – [[Pierre Sipriot]], ''René Depestre''
*1983 – [[Ghislain de Diesbach]], ''Madame de Staël''
*1984 – [[Jeanne Champion]], ''Suzanne Valadon''
*1985 – [[Georges Poisson]], ''Laclos ou l'Obstination''
*1986 – [[Jean Canavaggio]], ''Cervantes''
*1987 – [[Michel Surya]], ''Georges Bataille, la mort à l'œuvre''
*1988 – [[Frédéric Vitoux (writer)|Frédéric Vitoux]], ''La Vie de Louis-Ferdinand Céline''
*1989 – [[Joanna Richardson]], ''Judith Gautier''
*1990 – [[Pierre Citron]], ''Giono''
*1991 – [[Odette Joyeux]], ''Le Troisième œil, la vie de Nicéphore Niepce''
*1992 – [[Philippe Beaussant]], ''Lully''
*1993 – [[Jean Bothorel]], ''Louise de Vilmorin''
*1994 – [[David Bellos]], ''Georges Perec''
*1995 – [[Henry Gidel]], ''Les Deux Guitry''
*1996 – [[Anka Muhlstein]], ''Astolphe de Custine''
*1997 – [[Jean-Claude Lamy]], ''Prévert, les frères''
*1998 – [[Christian Liger]], ''Le Roman de Rossel''
*1999 – [[Claude Pichois]] and [[Alain Brunet]], ''Colette''
*2000 – [[Dominique Bona]], ''[[Berthe Morisot]]''
*2001 – [[Laure Murat]], ''La maison du docteur Blanche''
*2002 – [[Jean-Paul Goujon]], ''Une Vie Secrète (1870–1925)''; ''Mille lettres de Pierre Louÿs à Georges Louis (1890–1917)''
*2003 – [[Pierre Billard]], ''Louis Malle''
*2004 – [[Claude Dufresne]], ''Appelez-moi George Sand''
*2005 – [[Thibaut d'Anthonay]], ''Jean Lorrain''
*2006 – [[Angie David]], ''Dominique Aury''
*2007 – Patrice Locmant, ''Huysmans, le forçat de la vie''
*2008 – Jennifer Lesieur, ''Jack London''
*2009 – [[Viviane Forrester]], ''Virginia Woolf''
*2010 – [[Michel Winock]], ''Madame de Stael''
*2011 – [[Maurizio Serra]], ''[[Malaparte, vies et légendes]]''
*2012 – [[David Haziot]], ''Le Roman des Rouart''
*2013 – [[Pascal Mérigeau]], ''Jean Renoir''
*2014 – [[Jean Lebrun]], ''Notre Chanel''<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.lepoint.fr/culture/le-goncourt-de-la-biographie-a-jean-lebrun-pour-notre-chanel-03-06-2014-1830604_3.php |title=Le Goncourt de la biographie à Jean Lebrun pour "Notre Chanel" |agency=AFP |language=fr |work=lepoint.fr |date=3 June 2014 |access-date=3 July 2015}}</ref>
*2015 – [[Jean-Christophe Attias]], ''Moïse fragile''<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.lefigaro.fr/livres/2015/06/02/03005-20150602ARTFIG00252-jean-christophe-attias-prix-goncourt-de-la-biographie.php |title=Jean-Christophe Attias, prix Goncourt de la biographie |language=fr |work=Le Figaro |first=Morgane|last=Eloy |date=3 June 2015 |access-date=3 July 2015}}</ref>
*2016 – [[Philippe Forest]], ''Aragon''
*2017 – Marianne and Claude Schopp, ''Dumas fils ou l'Anti-Œdipe''
*2018 – Denis Demonpion, ''Salinger intime''
*2019 – Frédéric Pajak, ''Manifeste incertain, volume 7: [[Emily Dickinson]], [[Marina Tsvetaeva|Marina Tsvetaïeva]], l'immense poésie''
*2021 – [[Pauline Dreyfous]], ''Paul Morand''
*2022 – [[Jean-Pierre Langellier]], ''Léopold Sédar Senghor''
*2023 – [[Claude Burgelin]], ''Georges Perec''
*2024 – [[Geneviève Haroche-Bouzinac]], ''Madame de Sévigné''
{{div col end}}

==={{anchor|Prix Goncourt de la Nouvelle}} Prix Goncourt de la Nouvelle===
Goncourt Prize for short stories. Begun in 1974 in the form of scholarships. Awarded in partnership with the city of [[Strasbourg]] since 2001.
{{div col}}
*1974 – [[Daniel Boulanger]], ''Fouette, cocher !''
*1975 – [[S. Corinna Bille]], ''La Demoiselle sauvage''
*1976 – [[Antoine Blondin]], ''Quat'saisons''
*1977 – [[Henri Gougaud]], ''Départements et territoires d'outre-mort''
*1978 – [[Christiane Baroche]], ''Chambres, avec vue sur le passé''
*1979 – [[Andrée Chedid]], ''Le Corps et le Temps''
*1980 – [[Guy Lagorce]], ''Les Héroïques''
*1981 – [[Annie Saumont]], ''Quelquefois dans les cérémonies''
*1982 – [[René Depestre]], ''Alléluia pour une femme-jardin''
*1983 – [[Raymond Jean]], ''Un fantasme de Bella B.''
*1984 – [[Alain Gerber]], ''Les Jours de vin et de roses''
*1985 – [[Pierrette Fleutiaux]], ''Métamorphoses de la reine''
*1986 – [[Jean Vautrin]], ''Baby-boom''
*1987 – [[Noëlle Châtelet]], ''Histoires de bouche''
*1988 – [[Jean-Louis Hue]], ''Dernières Nouvelles du Père Noël''
*1989 – [[Paul Fournel]], ''Les Athlètes dans leur tête''
*1990 – [[Jacques Bens]], ''Nouvelles désenchantées''
*1991 – [[Rafaël Pividal]], ''Le Goût de la catastrophe''
*1992 – [[Catherine Lépront]], ''Trois gardiennes''
*1993 – [[Mariette Condroyer]], ''Un après-midi plutôt gai''
*1994 – [[Jean-Christophe Duchon-Doris]], ''Les Lettres du baron''
*1996 – [[Ludovic Janvier]], ''En mémoire du lit''
*1997 – [[François Sureau]], ''Le Sphinx de Darwin''
*1999 – [[Elvire de Brissac]], ''Les anges d'en bas''
*2000 – [[Catherine Paysan]], ''Les Désarmés''
*2001 – [[Stéphane Denis]], ''Elle a maigri pour le festival''
*2002 – [[Sébastien Lapaque]], ''Mythologie Française''
*2003 – [[Philippe Claudel]], ''Les petites mécaniques''
*2004 – [[Olivier Adam]], ''Passer l'hiver''
*2005 – [[Georges-Olivier Châteaureynaud]], ''Singe savant tabassé par deux clowns''
*2006 – [[Franz Bartelt]], ''Le Bar des habitudes''
*2007 – [[Brigitte Giraud]], ''L'Amour est très surestimé''
*2008 – [[Jean-Yves Masson]], ''Ultimes vérités sur la mort du nageur''
*2009 – [[Sylvain Tesson]], ''Une vie à coucher dehors''
*2010 – [[Éric-Emmanuel Schmitt]], ''Concerto à la mémoire d'un ange''
*2011 – [[Bernard Comment]], ''Tout passe''
*2012 – [[Didier Daeninckx]], ''L'Espoir en contrebande''
*2013 – [[Fouad Laroui]], ''L'Étrange Affaire du pantalon de Dassoukine''
*2014 – Nicolas Cavaillès, ''Vie de monsieur Leguat''<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.livreshebdo.fr/article/le-goncourt-de-la-nouvelle-recompense-nicolas-cavailles |title=Le Goncourt de la Nouvelle récompense Nicolas Cavaillès |language=fr |work=livreshebdo.fr |author=Marie-Christine Imbault |date=4 March 2014 |access-date=3 July 2015}}</ref>
*2015 – [[Patrice Franceschi]], ''Première personne du singulier''<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.livreshebdo.fr/article/le-prix-goncourt-de-la-nouvelle-est-attribue-patrice-franceschi |title=Le prix Goncourt de la nouvelle est attribué à Patrice Franceschi |language=fr |work=livreshebdo.fr |first=Agathe|last=Auproux |date=5 May 2015 |access-date=3 July 2015}}</ref>
*2016 – [[Marie-Hélène Lafon]], ''Histoires''
*2017 – [[Raphaël Haroche]], ''Retourner à la mer''
*2018 – [[Régis Jauffret]], ''Microfictions 2018''
*2019 – [[Caroline Lamarche]], ''Nous sommes à la lisière''
*2020 – [[Anne Serre]], ''Au cœur d'un été tout en or''
*2021 – [[Shmuel T. Meyer]], ''Et la guerre est finie...''
*2022 – [[Antoine Wauters]], ''Le museé des contradictions''
*2023 – [[David Thomas (French author)|David Thomas]], ''Partout les autres''
*2024 – [[Véronique Ovaldé]], ''À nos vies imparfaites''
{{div col end}}

==={{anchor|Prix Goncourt du Premier Roman}} Prix Goncourt du Premier Roman===
Goncourt Prize for [[debut novel]]. Awarded in partnership with the municipality of Paris.
{{div col}}
* 1990 – [[Hélène de Monferrand]], ''Les amies d'Héloïse''
* 1991 – [[Armande Gobry-Valle]], ''Iblis ou la défroque du serpent''
* 1992 – [[Nita Rousseau]], ''Les iris bleus''
* 1993 – [[Bernard Chambaz]], ''L'arbre de vies''
* 1994 – [[Bernard Lamarche-Vadel]], ''Vétérinaires''
* 1995 – [[Florence Seyvos]], ''Les apparitions''
* 1996 – [[Yann Moix]], ''Jubilations vers le ciel''
* 1997 – [[Jean-Christophe Rufin]], ''L'abyssin''
* 1998 – [[Shan Sa]], ''Porte de la paix céleste''
* 1999 – Nicolas Michel, ''Un revenant''
* 2000 – [[Benjamin Berton]], ''Sauvageons''
* 2001 – [[Salim Bachi]], ''Le chien d'Ulysse''
* 2002 – [[Soazig Aaron]], ''Le non-de Klara''
* 2003 – [[Claire Delannoy]], ''La guerre, l'Amérique''
* 2004 – [[Françoise Dorner]], ''La fille du rang derrière''
* 2005 – [[Alain Jaubert]], ''Val Paradis''
* 2006 – [[Hédi Kaddour]], ''Waltenberg''
* 2007 – [[Frédéric Brun (writer)|Frédéric Brun]], ''Perla''
* 2008 – [[Jakuta Alikavazovic]], ''Corps volatils''
* 2009 – [[Jean-Baptiste Del Amo]], ''Une éducation libertine''
* 2010 – [[Laurent Binet]], ''[[HHhH]]''
* 2011 – [[Michel Rostain]], ''Le Fils''
* 2012 – [[François Garde]], ''Ce qu'il advint du sauvage blanc''
* 2013 – [[Alexandre Postel]], ''Un homme effacé''
* 2014 – [[Frédéric Verger]], ''Arden''<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.lefigaro.fr/livres/2014/03/04/03005-20140304ARTFIG00239-frederic-verger-goncourt-du-premier-roman.php |language=fr |title=Frédéric Verger, Goncourt du premier roman |work=Le Figaro |first=Françoise|last=Dargent |date=4 March 2013 |access-date=5 March 2014}}</ref>
* 2015 – [[Kamel Daoud]], ''[[The Meursault Investigation]]''<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.academiegoncourt.com/?rubrique=1229172884 |title=Le Goncourt du premier roman 2015 |publisher=Academie Goncourt |date=5 May 2015 |access-date=7 May 2015}}</ref>
* 2016 – [[Joseph Andras]], ''{{ill|De nos frères blessés|fr}}''. Author declined the prize.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2016/may/21/how-turn-down-prestigious-literary-prize-winners-guide-etiquette |title=How to turn down a prestigious literary prize – a winner's guide to etiquette |work=The Guardian |author=John Dugdale |date=21 May 2016 |access-date=3 December 2016}}</ref>
* 2017 – [[Maryam Madjidi]], ''Marx et la poupée''<ref>{{cite news | url =http://www.lemonde.fr/livres/article/2017/05/03/le-goncourt-du-premier-roman-a-maryam-madjidi-le-chanteur-raphael-recompense_5121622_3260.html |title = Le Goncourt du premier roman à Maryam Madjidi |newspaper = Le Monde.fr |publisher = {{ill|Éditions Attila|fr}}|date = 3 May 2017| access-date=3 May 2017}}</ref>
* 2018 – Mahir Guven, ''Grand frère''
* 2019 – Marie Gauthier, ''Court vêtue''
* 2020 – [[Maylis Besserie]], ''Le Tiers Temps''
* 2021 – [[Émilienne Malfatto]], ''Que sur toi se lamente le Tigre''
* 2022 – Étienne Kern, ''Les envolés''
* 2023 – Pauline Peyarde, ''L'âge de détruire''
* 2024 – Eve Guerra, ''Rapatriement''
{{div col end}}

==={{anchor|Prix Goncourt de la Poésie}} Prix Goncourt de la Poésie===
{{French literature sidebar}}
Goncourt Prize for poetry. Established through the bequest of [[Adrien Bertrand]] (Prix Goncourt in 1914). The award is for the poet's entire career work. The prize was officially renamed in 2012 the ''Prix Goncourt de la Poésie [[Robert Sabatier]]'', after the poet.
{{div col}}
* 1985 – [[Claude Roy (poet)|Claude Roy]]
* 1986 – postponed to 1987<ref name="Academie Goncourt">{{Cite web|url=https://www.academiegoncourt.com/?article=1358369616|title=Academie Goncourt}}</ref>
* 1987 – [[Yves Bonnefoy]]
* 1988 – [[Eugène Guillevic]]
* 1989 – [[Alain Bosquet]]
* 1990 – [[Charles Le Quintrec]]
* 1991 – [[Jean-Claude Renard]]
* 1992 – [[Georges-Emmanuel Clancier]]
* 1993 – ''not awarded''<ref name="Academie Goncourt"/>
* 1994 – ''not awarded''<ref name="Academie Goncourt"/>
* 1995 – [[Lionel Ray]]
* 1996 – [[André Velter]]
* 1997 – [[Maurice Chappaz]]
* 1998 – [[Lorand Gaspar]]
* 1999 – [[Jacques Réda]]
* 2000 – [[Liliane Wouters]]
* 2001 – [[Claude Esteban]]
* 2002 – [[Andrée Chedid]]
* 2003 – [[Philippe Jaccottet]]
* 2004 – [[Jacques Chessex]]
* 2005 – [[Charles Dobzynski]]
* 2006 – [[Alain Jouffroy]]
* 2007 – [[Marc Alyn]]
* 2008 – [[Claude Vigée]]
* 2009 – [[Abdellatif Laabi]]
* 2010 – [[Guy Goffette]]
* 2011 – [[Vénus Khoury-Ghata]]
* 2012 – [[Jean-Claude Pirotte]]
* 2013 – [[Charles Juliet]]
* 2014 – ''not awarded''
* 2015 – [[William Cliff]]<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.livreshebdo.fr/article/le-prix-goncourt-de-la-poesie-robert-sabatier-est-decerne-william-cliff |title=Le prix Goncourt de la poésie Robert Sabatier est décerné à William Cliff |language=fr |work=[[Livres Hebdo]] |first=Agathe|last=Auproux |date=5 May 2015 |access-date=3 July 2015}}</ref>
* 2016 – Le Printemps des Poètes
* 2017 – [[Franck Venaille]]
* 2018 – [[Anise Koltz]]
* 2019 – Yvon Le Men
* 2020 – [[Michel Deguy]]
* 2021 – [[Jacques Roubaud]]<ref>{{Cite news |last=Gabinari |first=Pauline |date=4 May 2021 |title=Le Goncourt de la poésie Robert Sabatier 2021 couronne Jacques Roubaud |language=fr |work=Livres Hebdo |url=https://www.livreshebdo.fr/article/le-goncourt-de-la-poesie-robert-sabatier-2021-couronne-jacques-roubaud |access-date=21 October 2021}}</ref>
* 2022 – [[Jean-Michel Maulpoix]]
* 2023 – [[Laura Vazquez]]
* 2023 – [[Christian Bobin]] (special prize awarded posthumously)
* 2024 – [[Louis-Philippe Dalembert]]
{{div col end}}

==={{anchor|Bourse Goncourt Jeunesse}} Bourse Goncourt Jeunesse===
Goncrout Prize for children's literature. Awarded in partnership with the municipality of [[Fontvieille, Bouches-du-Rhône|Fontvieille]]. Discontinued after 2007.

*1999 – [[Claude Guillot]] and [[Fabienne Burckel]], ''Le fantôme de Shanghai''
*2000 – [[Eric Battut]], ''Rouge Matou''
*2002 – [[Fred Bernard]] and [[François Roca]], ''Jeanne and le Mokélé'' and ''Jesus Betz''
*2003 – [[Yvan Pommaux]], ''Avant la Télé''
*2004 – [[Jean Chalon]] and [[Martine Delerm]], ''Un arbre dans la lune''
*2005 – [[Natali Fortier]], ''Lili Plume''
*2006 – [[Bernard du Boucheron]] and [[Nicole Claveloux]], ''Un roi, une princesse and une pieuvre''
*2007 – [[Véronique Ovaldé]] and [[Joëlle Jolivet]], ''La très petite Zébuline''

===Prix Goncourt des Lycéens===
{{Main|Prix Goncourt des Lycéens}}

==See also==
*{{Lang|fr|[[Prix Renaudot]]|italic=no}} – announced at the same ceremony as the Prix Goncourt, it has become something of a second-place prize.
*[[Prix Goncourt des Lycéens]]
*{{Lang|fr|[[Grand Prix du roman de l'Académie française]]|italic=no}}
*[[List of literary awards#French literature|List of French literary awards]]
For a more comprehensive overview a [[list of literary awards]] is available.

==Notes and references==
'''Notes'''
{{Reflist|group= n}}
'''References'''
{{Reflist|30em}}

{{Authority control}}

[[Category:Prix Goncourt| ]]
[[Category:French fiction awards|Goncourt]]
[[Category:Awards established in 1903]]
[[Category:First book awards]]
[[Category:Short story awards]]
[[Category:French poetry awards|Goncourt]]
[[Category:Biography awards]]
[[Category:1903 establishments in France]]
[[Category:Children's literary awards]]

Latest revision as of 02:35, 7 January 2025

Prix Goncourt
Awarded for"the best and most imaginative prose work of the year"
DateNovember, annual
CountryFrance
Presented byAcadémie Goncourt
Reward(s)€10
First awarded1903
Websiteacademiegoncourt.com

The Prix Goncourt (French: Le prix Goncourt, IPA: [lə pʁi ɡɔ̃kuʁ], The Goncourt Prize) is a prize in French literature, given by the académie Goncourt to the author of "the best and most imaginative prose work of the year". The prize carries a symbolic reward of only 10 euros, but results in considerable recognition and book sales for the winning author. Four other prizes are also awarded: prix Goncourt du Premier Roman (first novel), prix Goncourt de la Nouvelle (short story), prix Goncourt de la Poésie (poetry) and prix Goncourt de la Biographie (biography). Of the "big six" French literary awards, the Prix Goncourt is the best known and most prestigious.[1] The other major literary prizes include the Grand Prix du roman de l'Académie française, the Prix Femina, the Prix Renaudot, the Prix Interallié and the Prix Médicis.[1]

History

[edit]
Edmond de Goncourt

Edmond de Goncourt, a successful author, critic, and publisher, bequeathed his estate for the foundation and maintenance of the Académie Goncourt.[2] In honour of his brother and collaborator, Jules Alfred Huot de Goncourt (1830–1870), the académie has awarded the Prix Goncourt every December since 1903.[2] The jury that determines the winner meets at the Drouant restaurant in November to make its decision.[3] Notable winners of the prize include Marcel Proust (In Search of Lost Time), Simone de Beauvoir (The Mandarins), André Malraux (Man's Fate) and Marguerite Duras (The Lover).[2]

The award was initially established to provide talented new authors with a monetary award that would allow them to write a second book.[4] Today, the Goncourt has a token prize amount (around 10 euros), about the same amount given in 1903, and so the prestige of the prize has been explained not because of the cash-value of the prize, but "in terms of the tremendous book sales it effects: the Goncourt winner becomes an instant millionaire."[5] Hervé Le Tellier's The Anomaly, which won the Goncourt in 2020, exceeded a million copies in less than a year after its publication.[6]

In 1987, the Prix Goncourt des Lycéens was established, as a collaboration between the académie Goncourt, the French Ministry of Education, and Fnac, a book, music, and movie retailer.

The Prix Renaudot is announced at the same ceremony as the Prix Goncourt. It has become known as something of a second-place prize.[7]

Controversies

[edit]
Journalists at Le Drouant restaurant, 2016 Prix Goncourt.

Within months of the first prize in 1903, it spawned a "hostile counter-prize" in the form of the Prix Femina to counter the all-male Jury of the Goncourt with an all-female jury on the Femina.[8]

Some choices have been controversial, a famous example was Marcel Proust in 1919; it was met with indignation by the public since many believed that the prize should have gone to Roland Dorgelès for Les Croix de bois, a novel about the First World War.[9][10] The prize was supposed to be awarded to promising young authors, whereas Proust was not considered "young" at 48 – however Proust was a beginning author which is the only eligibility requirement, age being unimportant.[9][10]

In 1921, Rene Maran won the Goncourt with Batouala, veritable roman negre, the first French novel to openly criticize European colonialism in Africa.[11] The novel caused "violent reactions" and was banned in all the French colonies.[11]

In 1932, the prize was controversial for passing up Louis-Ferdinand Céline's Voyage au bout de la nuit for Guy Mazeline's Les Loups.[12] The voting process became the basis of the 1992 book Goncourt 32 by Eugène Saccomano.[13]

Although the award may only be given to an author once, Romain Gary won it twice, in 1956 for Les racines du ciel and again under the pseudonym Émile Ajar in 1975 for La vie devant soi.[14] The Académie Goncourt awarded the prize to Ajar without knowing his real identity.[14] A period of literary intrigue followed. Gary's cousin's son Paul Pavlowitch posed as the author for a time. Gary later revealed the truth in his posthumous book Vie et mort d'Émile Ajar.[14]

In September 2021, the Goncourt attracted controversy after the jury decided, by a vote of 7 to 3, to include Les enfants de Cadillac by François Noudelmann on its 2021 list of finalists. Noudelmann is the partner of Camille Laurens, who is a member of the prize's jury. Laurens voted in favor of her partner's book.[15] In October 2021, the Académie Goncourt ultimately decided that it will no longer allow lovers and family members of the jury to be entered for consideration.[16]

Selection and voting process

[edit]

The Prix Goncourt is divided into three selection stages. The first selection is typically composed of fifteen finalists. The second selection is typically composed of eight finalists, narrowed down from the previous fifteen. A third and final selection leaves four finalists.[17]

In the voting rounds, a maximum of fourteen rounds can be carried out. To begin the deliberation process, the names of the four finalists are placed in a champagne bucket. In turn, the names are taken out and each member of the jury votes aloud in favour of, or in opposition to, the writer. An absolute majority—more than half the votes cast—is required until the tenth round, then a simple majority is sufficient to designate a winner. If, after fourteen rounds, there is no winner, the president's vote counts as double to determine a majority vote. At 12:45 p.m., the Secretary General, currently Philippe Claudel, appears in front of the crowd of journalists and announces the winner. The winner typically waits in a cafe near the Drouant so that they can arrive in time. The winner is interviewed by the media and is offered a symbolic check for ten euros.[18]

Winners

[edit]
Prix Goncourt winners[19]
Year Author French title English title Transl. year Film title Film year Notes Publisher (x time)
1903 John Antoine Nau Force ennemie Enemy Force 2010 La Plume
1904 Léon Frapié La Maternelle La Maternelle 1933 Albin Michel
1905 Claude Farrère Les Civilisés Paul Ollendorff
1906 Jean and Jérôme Tharaud Dingley, l'illustre écrivain Édouard Pelletan
1907 Émile Moselly Le Rouet d'ivoire and Jean des Brebis ou le livre de la misère [n 1] Plon
1908 Francis de Miomandre Écrit sur de l'eau... Édition du Feu, later Émile-Paul Frères
1909 Marius-Ary Leblond En France Fasquelle
1910 Louis Pergaud De Goupil à Margot Mercure de France
1911 Alphonse de Châteaubriant Monsieur des Lourdines The Keynote 1912 Monsieur des Lourdines 1943 Grasset
1912 André Savignon Les Filles de la pluie Grasset (2)
1913 Marc Elder Le peuple de la mer Calmann-Lévy
1914 Adrien Bertrand L'Appel du Sol The Call of the Soil 1919 [n 2] Calmann-Lévy (2)
1915 René Benjamin Gaspard Private Gaspard 1916 Fayard
1916 Henri Barbusse Le Feu Under Fire 1917 [n 3] Flammarion
1917 Henry Malherbe La Flamme au poing The Flame That Is France 1918 Albin Michel (2)
1918 Georges Duhamel Civilisation Civilization 1919 Mercure de France (2)
1919 Marcel Proust A l'ombre des jeunes filles en fleurs Within a Budding Grove 1920 [n 4] Gallimard
1920 Ernest Pérochon Nêne Nêne 1920 Nène[21] 1924 Plon (2)
1921 René Maran Batouala Batouala 1921 Albin Michel (3)
1922 Henri Béraud Le vitriol de la lune and Le martyre de l'obèse Albin Michel (4)
1923 Lucien Fabre Rabevel ou Le mal des ardents Gallimard (2)
1924 Thierry Sandre Le Chèvrefeuille, le Purgatoire, le Chapitre XIII Gallimard (3)
1925 Maurice Genevoix Raboliot Raboliot
Raboliot[22]
Raboliot[23]
1946
1972
2008
Grasset (3)
1926 Henri Deberly Le supplice de Phèdre Gallimard (4)
1927 Maurice Bedel Jérôme 60° latitude nord Jerome: or, The Latitude of Love 1928 Gallimard (5)
1928 Maurice Constantin-Weyer Un Homme se penche sur son passé A Man Scans His Past 1929 Un homme se penche sur son passé[24]
Les amants de rivière rouge[25]
1958
1996
Rieder
1929 Marcel Arland L'Ordre L'Ordre[26] 1985 Gallimard (6)
1930 H. Fauconnier Malaisie The Soul of Malaya or Malaisie 1931 Stock
1931 Jean Fayard Mal d'amour Desire 1931 Fayard (2)
1932 Guy Mazeline Les Loups The Wolves 1935 Gallimard (7)
1933 André Malraux La Condition humaine Man's Fate 1934 Gallimard (8)
1934 Roger Vercel Capitaine Conan Captain Conan 1935 Capitaine Conan 1996 Albin Michel (5)
1935 Joseph Peyre Sang et Lumières Grasset (4)
1936 Maxence Van Der Meersch L'Empreinte de Dieu Hath Not the Potter 1937 Albin Michel (6)
1937 Charles Plisnier Faux passeports [n 5] Corrêa
1938 Henri Troyat L'Araigne Plon (3)
1939 Philippe Hériat Les enfants gâtés Gallimard (9)
1940 Francis Ambrière Les grandes vacances The Long Holiday 1948 [n 6] Nouvelle France
1941 Henri Pourrat Vent de Mars Gallimard (10)
1942 Marc Bernard Pareil à des enfants Gallimard (11)
1943 Marius Grout Passage de l'Homme When the Man Passed By 1962 Gallimard (12)
1944 Elsa Triolet Le premier accroc coûte 200 Francs A Fine of Two Hundred Francs 1947 Denoël
1945 Jean-Louis Bory Mon village à l'heure allemande Flammarion (2)
1946 Jean-Jacques Gautier Histoire d'un Fait divers Julliard
1947 Jean-Louis Curtis Les Forêts de la Nuit The Forests of the Night 1950 Julliard (2)
1948 Maurice Druon Les grandes familles The Rise of Simon Lachaume 1952 The Possessors
Les grandes familles[27]
1958
1989
Julliard (3)
1949 Robert Merle Week-end à Zuydcoote Week-end at Zuydcoote 1950 Weekend at Dunkirk 1964 Gallimard (13)
1950 Paul Colin Les jeux sauvages Savage Play 1953 Gallimard (14)
1951 Julien Gracq Le Rivage des Syrtes The Opposing Shore 1986 [n 7] José Corti
1952 Béatrix Beck Léon Morin, prêtre The Priest (UK), The Passionate Heart (US) 1953 Léon Morin, Priest
Léon Morin, prêtre[28]
1961
1991
Gallimard (15)
1953 Pierre Gascar Les Bêtes Gallimard (16)
1954 Simone de Beauvoir Les Mandarins The Mandarins 1957 Gallimard (17)
1955 Roger Ikor Les eaux mêlées Les eaux mêlées[29] 1969 Albin Michel (7)
1956 Romain Gary Les racines du ciel The Roots of Heaven 1957 The Roots of Heaven 1958 Gallimard (18)
1957 Roger Vailland La Loi The Law 1958 The Law 1959 Gallimard (19)
1958 Francis Walder Saint-Germain ou la négociation Gallimard (20)
1959 André Schwarz-Bart Le dernier des Justes The Last of the Just 1960 Seuil
1960 Vintilă Horia Dieu est né en exil God Was Born in Exile 1961 Fayard (3)
1961 Jean Cau La pitié de Dieu The Mercy of God 1963 Gallimard (21)
1962 Anna Langfus Les bagages de sable The Lost Shore 1964 Gallimard (22)
1963 Armand Lanoux Quand la mer se retire Quand la mer se retire[30] 1963 Julliard (4)
1964 Georges Conchon L'Etat sauvage The Savage State 1978 Albin Michel (8)
1965 Jacques Borel L'Adoration The Bond 1968 Gallimard (23)
1966 Edmonde Charles-Roux Oublier Palerme To Forget Palermo 1968 Dimenticare Palermo 1990 Grasset (5)
1967 André Pieyre de Mandiargues La Marge The Margin 1970 The Margin 1976 Gallimard (24)
1968 Bernard Clavel Les fruits de l'hiver The Fruits of Winter 1969 Robert Laffont
1969 Félicien Marceau Creezy Creezy 1970 Creezy 1974 Gallimard (25)
1970 Michel Tournier Le Roi des Aulnes The Erl-King (UK) or The Ogre (US) 1972 The Ogre 1996 Gallimard (26)
1971 Jacques Laurent Les Bêtises Grasset (6)
1972 Jean Carrière L'Epervier de Maheux Pauvert
1973 Jacques Chessex L'Ogre A Father's Love (1975) or The Tyrant (2012) 1975 [n 8] Grasset (7)
1974 Pascal Lainé La Dentellière A Web of Lace (1976) or The Lacemaker (2008)[31] 1976 The Lacemaker 1977 Gallimard (27)
1975 Émile Ajar (Romain Gary) La vie devant soi Momo (1978) or The Life Before Us (1986) 1978 Madame Rosa
The Life Ahead
1977
2020
[n 9] Mercure de France (3)
1976 Patrick Grainville Les Flamboyants Seuil (2)
1977 Didier Decoin John l'enfer Seuil (3)
1978 Patrick Modiano Rue des boutiques obscures Missing Person 1980 Gallimard (28)
1979 Antonine Maillet Pélagie-la-Charrette Pélagie: The Return to Acadie 1982 Grasset (8)
1980 Yves Navarre Le Jardin d'acclimatation Cronus' Children 1986 Flammarion (3)
1981 Lucien Bodard Anne-Marie Grasset (9)
1982 Dominique Fernandez Dans la main de l'Ange Grasset (10)
1983 Frédérick Tristan Les égarés The Lost Ones 1991 Balland
1984 Marguerite Duras L'Amant The Lover 1986 The Lover 1992 Minuit
1985 Yann Queffélec Les Noces barbares The Wedding 1987 The Cruel Embrace 1987 Gallimard (29)
1986 Michel Host Valet de nuit Grasset (11)
1987 Tahar Ben Jelloun La nuit sacrée The Sacred Night 1989 La Nuit sacrée[32] 1993 Seuil (4)
1988 Érik Orsenna L'Exposition coloniale Love and Empire 1991 Seuil (5)
1989 Jean Vautrin Un grand pas vers le Bon Dieu Grasset (12)
1990 Jean Rouaud Les Champs d'honneur Fields of Glory 1992 Minuit (2)
1991 Pierre Combescot Les Filles du Calvaire Grasset (13)
1992 Patrick Chamoiseau Texaco Texaco 1998 Gallimard (30)
1993 Amin Maalouf Le Rocher de Tanios The Rock of Tanios 1994 Grasset (14)
1994 Didier Van Cauwelaert Un Aller simple One-Way 2003 One Way Ticket[33] 2001 Albin Michel (9)
1995 Andreï Makine Le Testament français Dreams of My Russian Summers 1998 Mercure de France (4)
1996 Pascale Roze Le Chasseur Zéro Albin Michel (10)
1997 Patrick Rambaud La Bataille The Battle 2000 Grasset (15)
1998 Paule Constant Confidence pour confidence Trading Secrets 2001 Gallimard (31)
1999 Jean Echenoz Je m'en vais I'm Gone (US) or I'm Off (UK) 2001 Minuit (3)
2000 Jean-Jacques Schuhl Ingrid Caven Ingrid Caven 2004 Gallimard (32)
2001 Jean-Christophe Rufin Rouge Brésil Brazil Red 2004 Gallimard (33)
2002 Pascal Quignard Les Ombres errantes The Roving Shadows 2011 Grasset (16)
2003 Jacques-Pierre Amette La maîtresse de Brecht Brecht's Lover (US) or Brecht's Mistress (UK) 2005 Albin Michel (11)
2004 Laurent Gaudé Le Soleil des Scorta The House of Scorta (US 2006) The Scortas' Sun (UK 2007) 2006 Actes Sud
2005 François Weyergans Trois jours chez ma mère Grasset (17)
2006 Jonathan Littell Les Bienveillantes The Kindly Ones 2009 Gallimard (34)
2007 Gilles Leroy Alabama Song Mercure de France (5)
2008 Atiq Rahimi Syngué Sabour: La pierre de patience Stone of Patience (UK) or The Patience Stone (US) 2010 The Patience Stone 2012 P.O.L
2009 Marie NDiaye Trois femmes puissantes Three Strong Women 2012 Gallimard (35)
2010 Michel Houellebecq La Carte et le territoire The Map and the Territory 2012 Flammarion (4)
2011 Alexis Jenni L'Art français de la guerre The French Art of War 2017 Gallimard (36)
2012 Jérôme Ferrari Le Sermon sur la chute de Rome The Sermon on the Fall of Rome 2014 Actes Sud (2)
2013 Pierre Lemaitre Au revoir là-haut The Great Swindle 2015 See You Up There 2017 Albin Michel (12)
2014 Lydie Salvayre Pas pleurer Cry, Mother Spain 2016 Seuil (6)
2015 Mathias Énard Boussole Compass 2017 Actes Sud (3)
2016 Leïla Slimani Chanson douce Lullaby (UK)
The Perfect Nanny (USA)
2018 Perfect Nanny 2019 Gallimard (37)
2017 Éric Vuillard L'Ordre du jour The Order of the Day 2018 Actes Sud (4)
2018 Nicolas Mathieu Leurs enfants après eux And Their Children After Them 2019 And Their Children After Them 2024 Actes Sud (5)
2019 Jean-Paul Dubois Tous les hommes n'habitent pas le monde de la même façon Not Everybody Lives the Same Way 2022 L'Olivier
2020 Hervé Le Tellier L'Anomalie The Anomaly 2021 Gallimard (38)
2021 Mohamed Mbougar Sarr La plus secrète mémoire des hommes The Most Secret Memory of Men 2023 [n 10] Philippe Rey / Jimsaan
2022 Brigitte Giraud Vivre Vite Flammarion (5)
2023 Jean-Baptiste Andrea Veiller sur elle Watching Over Her 2025 L'Iconoclaste (1)
2024 Kamel Daoud Houris Gallimard (39)

Other awards

[edit]

In addition to the Prix Goncourt for a novel, the Academy awards four other awards, for first novel, short story, biography and poetry.

As of March 2009, the académie changed the award name by dropping "bourses" ("scholarship") from the title.[35][36] The prefix "prix" can be included or not, such as "Prix Goncourt de la Poésie" (Goncourt prize for Poetry) or "Goncourt de la Poésie" (Goncourt of Poetry). For example: "Claude Vigée was awarded a Goncourt de la Poésie in 2008". Or, "Claude Vigée won the 2008 prix Goncourt de la Poésie".

The award titles are:

Pre-2009 award name Post-2009 award name Category
Bourse Goncourt de la Biographie Prix Goncourt de la Biographie Biography
Bourse Goncourt de la Nouvelle Prix Goncourt de la Nouvelle Short story
Bourse Goncourt du Premier Roman Prix Goncourt du Premier Roman Debut novel
Bourse Goncourt de la Poésie Prix Goncourt de la Poésie Poetry
Bourse Goncourt Jeunesse discontinued Juvenile

The winners are listed below.[37]

Prix Goncourt de la Biographie

[edit]

Goncourt Prize for biography. Awarded in partnership with the city of Nancy. The prize was renamed officially in 2017 the Prix Goncourt de la Biographie Edmonde Charles-Roux, after a former president of the Goncourt Academy.

Prix Goncourt de la Nouvelle

[edit]

Goncourt Prize for short stories. Begun in 1974 in the form of scholarships. Awarded in partnership with the city of Strasbourg since 2001.

Prix Goncourt du Premier Roman

[edit]

Goncourt Prize for debut novel. Awarded in partnership with the municipality of Paris.

Prix Goncourt de la Poésie

[edit]

Goncourt Prize for poetry. Established through the bequest of Adrien Bertrand (Prix Goncourt in 1914). The award is for the poet's entire career work. The prize was officially renamed in 2012 the Prix Goncourt de la Poésie Robert Sabatier, after the poet.

Bourse Goncourt Jeunesse

[edit]

Goncrout Prize for children's literature. Awarded in partnership with the municipality of Fontvieille. Discontinued after 2007.

Prix Goncourt des Lycéens

[edit]

See also

[edit]

For a more comprehensive overview a list of literary awards is available.

Notes and references

[edit]

Notes

  1. ^ Pseudonym of Émile Chénin
  2. ^ Awarded in 1916. See footnote.[20]
  3. ^ See footnote.[20]
  4. ^ Volume 2 of In Search of Lost Time
  5. ^ First foreigner to win Prix Goncourt.
  6. ^ Published and awarded in 1946 due to WWII.
    Non-fiction memoir.
  7. ^ Refused prize.
  8. ^ The translated editions from 1975 & 2012 are the same by Martin Sokolinsky.
  9. ^ The rules of the Prix Goncourt state that an author can win only once. Gary had already won in 1956 for Les racines du ciel. However, since La vie devant soi was published under the pseudonym Émile Ajar, the Académie Goncourt awarded the prize without knowing the author's true identity. Gary's cousin's son Paul Pavlowitch posed as the author for a time.
  10. ^ First winner of the Goncourt from Sub-Saharan Africa[34]

References

  1. ^ a b Unwin, Timothy (1997). "Introduction". The Cambridge Companion to the French Novel: From 1800 to the Present. Cambridge University Press. p. xxii. ISBN 9780521499149. The 'big six' literary prizes in France have an extremely high profile and are, significantly, all awarded for novels. The best known and most prestigious is the Prix Goncourt. The other major literary prizes are the Grand Prix du Roman de l'Academie Francaise, the Prix Femina (awarded by a jury of women, though not necessarily to a female novelist), the Prix Renaudot, the Prix Interallie and the Prix Medicis.
  2. ^ a b c Burke, David (2008). Writers in Paris: Literary Lives in the City of Light. Counterpoint Press. p. 181. ISBN 9781593761578.
  3. ^ Glyn, Anthony (2000). The Companion Guide to Paris. Companion Guides. p. 98. ISBN 9781900639200.
  4. ^ Sally J. Scholz (2005). The Contradictions of Freedom: Philosophical Essays on Simone de Beauvoir's The Mandarins. SUNY Press. p. 18. ISBN 9780791465608.
  5. ^ James F English (2009). The Economy of Prestige: prizes, awards, and the circulation of cultural value. Harvard University Press. p. 61. ISBN 9780674036536.
  6. ^ Girgis, Dahlia (7 May 2021). "Un tirage total d'un million d'exemplaires pour "L'anomalie"". Livres Hebdo (in French). Retrieved 8 August 2021.
  7. ^ Hollier, Denis (1994). A New History of French Literature. Harvard University Press. p. 967. ISBN 9780674615663.
  8. ^ James F English (2009). The Economy of Prestige: prizes, awards, and the circulation of cultural value. Harvard University Press. p. 61. ISBN 9780674036536.
  9. ^ a b Rodic, Vesna (2008). Lyricism and Politics in Paul Valery's Poetry and Poetic Theory and in "La Nouvelle Revue Francaise", 1909–1939. ISBN 9781109096477.
  10. ^ a b Ashley, Katherine, ed. (2004). "L'Attribution du prix Goncourt à Proust en 1919". Prix Goncourt, 1902–2003: essals critiques (in French). Bern: Peter Lang. ISBN 9783039100187.
  11. ^ a b Unwin, Timothy (1997). "The colonial and postcolonial Francophone novel". The Cambridge Companion to the French Novel: From 1800 to the Present. Cambridge University Press. p. 195. ISBN 9780521499149.
  12. ^ Ashley, Katherine, ed. (2004). Prix Goncourt, 1902–2003: essals critiques (in French). Bern: Peter Lang. p. 16. ISBN 9783039100187.
  13. ^ Lapaque, Sébastien (16 September 1999). Céline-Mazeline sur le ring (in French). {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  14. ^ a b c Ashley, Katherine, ed. (2004). "Avant propos". Prix Goncourt, 1902–2003: essals critiques (in French). Bern: Peter Lang. ISBN 9783039100187.
  15. ^ Onishi, Norimitsu; Méheut, Constant (29 September 2021). "In Paris, It's Literary Scandal Season Again". The New York Times. Retrieved 30 September 2021.
  16. ^ "No lovers allowed in top French book prize after ethics scandal". France 24. Agence France-Presse. 5 October 2021. Retrieved 4 November 2021.
  17. ^ "Prix Goncourt – Présentation". Académie Goncourt (in French). Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  18. ^ Carreau, Nicolas (3 November 2021). "Goncourt : comment est remis le prix et qui est le favori cette année ?". Europe 1 (in French). Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  19. ^ "Tous les lauréats". Académie Goncourt (in French). Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  20. ^ a b No award was given in 1914 due to the war. In 1916 two awards were given, one for 1916 (Barbusse) and one for 1914 (Bertrand).
  21. ^ Nène at IMDb
  22. ^ Raboliot at IMDb
  23. ^ Raboliot at IMDb
  24. ^ Un homme se penche sur son passé at IMDb
  25. ^ Les amants de rivière rouge at IMDb
  26. ^ L'Ordre at IMDb
  27. ^ Les grandes familles at IMDb
  28. ^ Léon Morin, prêtre at IMDb
  29. ^ Les eaux mêlées at IMDb
  30. ^ Quand la mer se retire at IMDb
  31. ^ Translated by David Dugan. The Dirty Goat, issue 18, pg. 170 Archived 14 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine.
  32. ^ La Nuit sacrée at IMDb
  33. ^ One Way Ticket at IMDb
  34. ^ "Mohamed Mbougar Sarr wins Goncourt Prize, France's most prestigious literary award". France 24. 3 November 2021. Retrieved 3 November 2021.
  35. ^ Autres prix décernés par l'Académie Goncourt
  36. ^ Les Goncourt surfent, Le Figaro, 29 January 2009
  37. ^ Autres prix décernés par l'Académie Goncourt: Lauréats
  38. ^ "Le Goncourt de la biographie à Jean Lebrun pour "Notre Chanel"". lepoint.fr (in French). AFP. 3 June 2014. Retrieved 3 July 2015.
  39. ^ Eloy, Morgane (3 June 2015). "Jean-Christophe Attias, prix Goncourt de la biographie". Le Figaro (in French). Retrieved 3 July 2015.
  40. ^ Marie-Christine Imbault (4 March 2014). "Le Goncourt de la Nouvelle récompense Nicolas Cavaillès". livreshebdo.fr (in French). Retrieved 3 July 2015.
  41. ^ Auproux, Agathe (5 May 2015). "Le prix Goncourt de la nouvelle est attribué à Patrice Franceschi". livreshebdo.fr (in French). Retrieved 3 July 2015.
  42. ^ Dargent, Françoise (4 March 2013). "Frédéric Verger, Goncourt du premier roman". Le Figaro (in French). Retrieved 5 March 2014.
  43. ^ "Le Goncourt du premier roman 2015". Academie Goncourt. 5 May 2015. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
  44. ^ John Dugdale (21 May 2016). "How to turn down a prestigious literary prize – a winner's guide to etiquette". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
  45. ^ "Le Goncourt du premier roman à Maryam Madjidi". Le Monde.fr. Éditions Attila [fr]. 3 May 2017. Retrieved 3 May 2017.
  46. ^ a b c "Academie Goncourt".
  47. ^ Auproux, Agathe (5 May 2015). "Le prix Goncourt de la poésie Robert Sabatier est décerné à William Cliff". Livres Hebdo (in French). Retrieved 3 July 2015.
  48. ^ Gabinari, Pauline (4 May 2021). "Le Goncourt de la poésie Robert Sabatier 2021 couronne Jacques Roubaud". Livres Hebdo (in French). Retrieved 21 October 2021.