Éric Vuillard Wins Goncourt Prize for Work on Hitler’s Rise

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/07/books/prix-goncourt-eric-vuillard.html

Version 0 of 1.

France’s most prestigious literary prize, the Prix Goncourt, has been awarded to “L’Ordre du Jour,” by Éric Vuillard, a historical work about shady business dealings behind the Nazi annexation of Austria in 1938.

The book, published by Actes Sud and set to be translated in the United States under the title “The Order of the Day,” was honored on Monday in a ceremony at the Paris restaurant Drouant.

The prize, selected by 10 members of the Académie Goncourt, comes with a symbolic award of 10 euros, or about $12, but it usually results in sharp spikes in sales in France and beyond. Previous winners include Michel Houellebecq, Marcel Proust and Simone de Beauvoir.

“L’Ordre du Jour” is based on historical documents and photographs. It opens with a friendly meeting in 1933 between Hitler and 24 major figures in German industry and finance, including brands like Bayer and Allianz that are familiar today.

“They are here beside us, among us,” Mr. Vuillard writes. “They are our cars, our washing machines, our household goods, our radio-alarms, our homeowner’s insurance, our watch batteries. They are here, there and everywhere, as all sorts of things. Our daily life is theirs.”

Mr. Vuillard, a 49-year-old filmmaker and the author of several previous novels, said by telephone that he had been inspired by Montesquieu’s warning that the concentration of power and money in the hands of a few was “dangerous for everybody.”

Elements of realism make novels powerful, he said. “I don’t think that the novel is about imagination,” he continued, adding later in an email that while his book was based on true events, he considered it a novel “because there is not such a thing as neutral history.”

The independent publisher Other Press plans to publish a translation in the United States in November 2018. Judith Gurewich, the publisher of the company, said in a statement that she had acquired the rights because it “feels like a retroactive replay of how power gets stolen when blackmailers and thugs are in the running.”

Picador plans to publish the work in Britain in 2019.

The runner-up for the Prix Goncourt this year was “Bakhita,” by Véronique Olmi, based on the true story of a female slave born in 19th-century Sudan. It received four votes from the judges, against six for “L’Ordre du Jour.”