("THE PRIEST")
WINNER OF THE GRAND PRIZE OF CRIME FICTION 2009
Le Grand Prix de la Littérature Policière 2009

A beacon of light in a dark world full of fear, hate and mistrust.
No award can truly do justice to the character that Ken Bruen represents.
Long may you reign supreme!
Céad míle beannachta.








Ken Bruen receives French honour
Galway Advertiser, October 08, 2009.
By Kernan Andrews
Internationally acclaimed Galway crime author Ken Bruen has won Le Grand Prix De La Littérature Policière 2009 for the best non-French language crime novel.
Mr Bruen won the award for his novel Priest and he now joins the ranks of such other celebrated crime authors as Elmore Leonard, PD James, Thomas Harris, James Lee Burke, Michael Connelly, and Ian Rankin, who have also won the award.
The Grand Prix de Littérature Policière is a French literary prize founded in 1948 by author and literary critic Maurice-Bernard Endrèbe. It is the most prestigious award for crime and detective fiction in France. Two prizes are awarded annually to the best French novel and to the best international crime novel published in that year.












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