Celebrated French writer Emmanuel Carrere was awarded Spain’s prestigious Princess of Asturias prize for literature on Wednesday, one of the most important awards in the Spanish-speaking world. 

Carrere, a leading exponent of ‘autofiction’, where writers fictionalise their own lives, is known for a string of books including L’adversaire (The Adversary, 2000), Un Roman Russe (My Life as a Russian Novel, 2007) and his new hit memoir Yoga

In awarding the prize, the jury hailed the 63-year-old Parisian screenwriter and director for his “highly personal work that opens up a new space for expression that blurs the boundaries between reality and fiction”. 

Over a writing career of nearly 40 years, Carrere has built up a body of work based on self-exploration, which often recounts the lives of others. 

Such was the case with L’adversaire which was based on the life of Jean-Claude Romand, a notorious Frenchman who killed his parents, wife and children after years pretending to be a successful doctor.

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