Karine Tuil

Her works have themes ranging from marriage and Jewish identity to detention centers and corporate politics.

It is translated in several languages and was adapted to the theater by Salomé Lelouch in 2014 under the title The marriage of Mr Wessmann.

In 2003, she published Tout sur mon frère, (Éditions Grasset), which explores the negative effects of autofiction.

This novel looks at "the story of a young man of Arab descent, Samir, who, to succeed in his career as a business lawyer in New York," borrows "part of the identity of his best childhood friend, a Jew named Samuel[9] " .

[10] L'Invention de nos vies was translated in several countries including Great Britain, the United States (under the title The age of reinvention[11][12]), Canada,[13] Italy,[14][15] China, Greece, the Netherlands,[16] and Germany.

On the publication of this tenth novel, the newspaper Le Monde in 2016 writes, on all her books: "Some themes are obvious.

Tuil in 2019