| Kev Lambert | |
|---|---|
|   Lambert in 2018 | |
| Born | 1992 (age 32–33)  Chicoutimi, Quebec, Canada | 
| Occupation | Writer | 
| Language | French | 
| Alma mater | Université de Montréal | 
| Years active | 2010s-present | 
| Notable works | Tu aimeras ce que tu as tué, Querelle de Roberval | 
Kev Lambert (born 1992) is a Canadian writer from Quebec. [1] He is most noted for his novel Querelle de Roberval, which won the Prix Ringuet in 2019. [2]
Originally from the Chicoutimi borough of Saguenay, Quebec, Lambert moved to Montreal in his late teens to study literature at the Université de Montréal. [1] He published his debut novel Tu aimeras ce que tu as tué in 2017, [3] and followed up with Querelle de Roberval in 2018. [4] In addition to the Prix Ringuet, Querelle de Roberval won the Prix Sade [5] and the Prix Œuvre de la relève à Montréal, [6] and was shortlisted for the Prix littéraire des collégiens. [7]
Biblioasis has published English translations of both of his novels, with You Will Love What You Have Killed published in 2020, [1] and Querelle of Roberval released in 2022. [8] The translated version of Querelle of Roberval was a finalist for the 2022 Atwood Gibson Writers' Trust Fiction Prize, [9] and won the 2023 ReLit Award for fiction. [10]
Lambert is openly gay. [11] Querelle de Roberval is partially based on Jean Genet's 1947 novel Querelle of Brest (Querelle de Brest). [12]
He published his third novel, Que notre joie demeure, in 2022. [13] The novel was named to the initial longlist for the 2023 Prix Goncourt. [14] Following the nomination, the novel sparked some controversy in France because Lambert was open about having had the novel vetted by a sensitivity reader prior to publication as it featured a key character of Haitian descent, with previous Goncourt winner Nicolas Mathieu criticizing the practice as stifling to a writer's creative liberty. [15] The novel was subsequently named the winner of the Prix Médicis [16] and the Prix Ringuet. [17]
May Our Joy Endure, an English translation of Que notre joie demeure, was published in fall 2024, [18] around the same time as the publication of Lambert's fourth novel Les Sentiers de neige. [19]