Christine Leunens

New Zealand-Belgian Novelist

Christine Leunens was born in Hartford, Connecticut, United States on December 29th, 1964 and is the New Zealand-Belgian Novelist. At the age of 59, Christine Leunens biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

Date of Birth
December 29, 1964
Nationality
Belgium, New Zealand
Place of Birth
Hartford, Connecticut, United States
Age
59 years old
Zodiac Sign
Capricorn
Profession
Writer
Christine Leunens Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 59 years old, Christine Leunens physical status not available right now. We will update Christine Leunens's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.

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Christine Leunens Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
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Hobbies
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Education
Victoria University of Wellington (PhD), Harvard University (MLA)
Christine Leunens Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
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Children
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Christine Leunens Career

In 1990, she moved to Picardy and lived a year on a farm breeding horses, and started writing plays. She moved on to screenwriting, won an award in 1996 for Best Original Screenplay from the Centre National du Cinéma under the Presidency of Isabelle Huppert. However, a summer session in English Literature at Exeter College, Oxford University, changed her path. In 1997 she dedicated herself to writing her first novel, Primordial Soup, which focuses on sex, food and faith. A critical success in 1999, The Sunday Times described it as a "remarkable debut novel", and Publishers Weekly as "kinky, grotesque and very funny" and "not for the faint of heart".

In 2000, she researched the Hitler Youth and WWII Vienna context of Caging Skies at the Memorial de Caen in Normandy. It is about a member of the Hitler Youth in Vienna, who "discovers his parents are hiding a young Jewish woman behind a false wall in their home". Le Monde called it a "beautiful novel, powerful, different, and ambitious" about "love so total that it locks up, isolates and colonises the partner until destruction annihilates the outside world". The French translation went through four editions, and was nominated for the Prix Médicis étranger in 2007, and the Prix du roman Fnac 2008.

Leunens was awarded a Master of Liberal Arts in English and American Literature and Language from Harvard University in 2005, a Dean's Thesis Prize in the Humanities for her work on Henry James and The Ambassadors, and a Thomas Small Prize for Academic Achievement and Character. In 2006, she moved with her family to New Zealand to get "as close as it gets to paradise [...]" and "discovered that there were nevertheless scars, deep scars. A story is always born from a wound — at least the kind of stories I write." She was granted a scholarship from the Victoria University of Wellington in 2008 to do a PhD in Creative Writing at the International Institute of Modern Letters. Her doctoral study on the mother-in-law and daughter-in-law relationship inspired her third novel, A Can of Sunshine. It tells the story of a young mother having problems with her mother-in-law, a lonely widow, and when she herself tragically loses her own husband in a car accident, follows the relationship between these two women over the next ten years. The novel received the support of a Creative New Zealand Quick Grant and was selected by the New Zealand Herald as amongst the best books in English worldwide in 2013.

The play adaptation of Caging Skies, written by Desirée Gezentsvey and directed by Andrew Foster, had its world premiere at the Circa Theatre, Wellington, in August 2017.

Film director Taika Waititi adapted Caging Skies as the 2019 film Jojo Rabbit. Filmed in Prague in spring 2018, starring Waititi, Roman Griffin Davis, Scarlett Johansson, Sam Rockwell, Rebel Wilson, Thomasin McKenzie, Stephen Merchant, and Alfie Allen, Jojo Rabbit was one of the first releases by Fox Searchlight Pictures, the arthouse studio of 21st Century Fox, under their new ownership by Disney. The film won the People's Choice Award at the 2019 Toronto International Film Festival, and was nominated for two Golden Globes, as well as six British Academy of Film and Television Arts Awards, and six Academy Awards, including the Oscar for Best Picture and Best Adapted Screenplay. It won the Writers Guild of America 2020 Award, as well as the BAFTA and Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay, and the Humanitas Prize for writing "intended to promote human dignity, meaning and freedom." Both the book and the film were nominated for the USC Libraries Scripter Award 2020 and won AFI Awards.

Her new bestselling novel, In Amber's Wake is "set against the background of the anti-nuclear movement, Springbok Tour and the Rainbow Warrior [bombing]". It focuses on a "love triangle" and "relationships but also families and the difficulties there can be in families, which so often is hidden away". A film adaptation is being produced by Mimi Polk Gitlin, the producer of the Academy Award-winning film, Thelma & Louise.

Leunens has been awarded a UNESCO City of Literature Prague Writer in Residence in 2023, where she will reside at the Kafka House.

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