Martine L. Jacquot (born 1955) is a French-born novelist, poet, short story writer and journalist, living in Canada since 1982. She has a doctorate in French literature.
She was President of the Conseil Culturel Acadien de la Nouvelle-Écosse (CCANÉ) for three years and created the magazine ARTcadie. She was a member of the Board of Governors of the Nova Scotia Museum for 12 years. She is editor-in-chief of the academic journal Les Cahiers canadiens based at the Volgograd State University in Russia[6] and a long-time contributor to Arabic-language publications such as Ashtarowt and Al Quds.[3]
A prolific, internationally-published, polygraphic author, she is a poet, novelist, short story writer, essayist, and children's author.[7] Her work is part of the Littérature acadienne [fr].[2] She is one of the few Acadian authors of short stories. These are collected in Sables mouvants (1994), Des Oiseaux dans la tête (1998), and Les enjoliveurs du temps (2023). Most of her work is contemporary, but she has moved into historical fiction with Au gré du vent (2005), set in Halifax and southwestern Nova Scotia during the second half of the 19th century, for which she has written a sequel, Déferlement sur le siècle nouveau (2023). Her Nanouk series, centered around a husky, is particularly popular with young readers. Her novels often centre around a protagonist (sometimes also a narrator) who makes a journey or displacement that causes her to reconsider her family or social situation.[8]
She is a member of the Parlement des Écrivaines Francophones and has published internationally.
Awards and honours
1987, Short story prize, Revue Liaison, for Des Yeux d'Irlande[9]
1990, President's Award, literary contest of the Société Culturelle du Haut Saint-Jean, Edmundston, New Brunswick, for Les Nuits Démasquées
1992, Short story award, Revue Liaison, with Jazz[10]
1994, Winner, "L'Acadie à découvrir" contest, SRC radio
1997, Winner, Concours de vieux mots acadiens, SRC radio
2000, Winner, Ontario Writers' Association Short Story Award (performed on stage at the Théâtre du Trillium [fr], Ottawa)[11]
2004, Acadia Student Union Teaching Recognition Award