Prize-winning author Emmanuelle Pagano was born in 1969 and lives in the Ard che in south-east France. She has written fifteen novels. One Day I'll Tell You Everything won the 2009 European Prize for Literature and has been translated into more than fifteen languages. She regularly collaborates with artists working in other disciplines.
'Pagano writes about siblings, about love and lies, about life slipping away, and about adolescents who are full of life. She speaks about bodies transforming, seasons changing, and memories that never fade. This extraordinarily beautiful novel, both sensitive and thoughtful, has an astute and deeply affecting ending.' * Livre et Lire * 'A writer of immense originality: she has a sharp awareness of bodies and the visible or secret movements of those bodies, a language rich with images and seemingly familiar, but in reality shrewdly sophisticated, and a deep knowledge of nature and all the forces that pass through nature.' * Le Pays d'Auge * 'Adele's brother has never understood her, and hasn't spoken to her for ten years...Apart from her brother, no one in the village knows the truth about Adele, not even Tony, with whom she is having a love affair she never thought possible...The truth emerges from the mouth of a child, one of the adolescents Adele drives to and from school every day, and who constitute as many mirrors in which she does and doesn't recognise herself...The vulnerabilities of this person living in a body that is alien to her are subtly echoed by the issues of identity experienced by her adolescent passengers. Emmanuelle Pagano's voice is understated and brilliant; she reveals the convulsions of the soul, the subtle feelings of her characters-One Day I'll Tell You Everything is a heartrending book.' * Tageblatt * 'This novel is above all moving because of the author's extraordinarily beautiful language-both harsh and uncompromising like the climate, and exquisitely crafted and poetic-when, for instance, Adele describes herself as masculine or feminine, depending on whether it is before or after her operation.' * Quotidien national * 'To live in one's body as if it were a foreign, inhospitable land: this thread of suffering runs through the novel like a burn...Pagano, a young writer, who is also a screenwriter (for Leos Carax, among others) ,has a talent for creating images...A vibrant, fundamental truth emerges from these pages.' * Le Temps * 'There is something luminous and gentle about Emmanuelle Pagano's prose...We do not expect the female narrator to have been a him. The theme of femininity carried by the substance of the writing itself takes on a deeper and more radical meaning...Pagano also excels at rendering palpable the lives of a tight-lipped, enclosed community, where the wind is a hazard and where farm anecdotes can become local mythology.' * Le Matricule des anges * 'In One Day I'll Tell You Everything, Emmanuelle Pagano infiltrates the intricacies of families and romantic turmoil; she strips bare the eternal duel between absolute love and failure to understand...Pagano writes with sensitivity, from the bottom of her heart. She takes us into a love story that is as troubling as it is exhilarating. Whether she's writing about tormented, disadvantaged bodies, or her Ardeche mountains, her writing is all sensuality.' * Telerama * 'A love story that is as troubling as it is exhilarating. Whether she's writing about bodies in torment or her Ardeche mountains, her writing is all sensuality.' * Telerama * 'A superb novel, both thrilling and consoling.' * Le Soir * 'Close to being a masterpiece. A novel full of grace that takes us into the heart of female experience.' * Le Matricule des Anges *