Originally from Carleton-sur-Mer in the Gasp region of Quebec, Christophe Bernard studied literature in Quebec City, Aix-en-Provence and Berlin. A prolific literary translator, Bernard was a finalist for the 2016 Governor General's Literary Award for English-to-French Translation. The Hollow Beast, a finalist for the 2018 Governor General's Literary Award for Fiction in French, won the Quebec-Ontario Prize, the Quebec Booksellers' Prize and the Jovette-Bernier Prize. Christophe Bernard lives in Burlington, Vermont. Lazer Lederhendleris a full-time literary translator specializing in Qubcois fiction and non-fiction. His translations have earned awards and distinctions in Canada, the UK, and the US. He has translated the works of noted authors, including Gatan Soucy, Nicolas Dickner, Edem Awumey, Perrine Leblanc, and Catherine Leroux. He lives in Montreal with the visual artist Pierrette Bouchard.
"Praise for The Hollow Beast ""[A] big, high octane novel . . . Thomas Pynchon meets Rabelais and Don Quixote meets Who Framed Roger Rabbit are two of several crossbreed critical comparisons the book has inspired."" —Globe and Mail ""Bernard weaves a multicoloured, shimmering tapestry of the Gaspé . . . The many threads aren’t necessarily gathered into a neatly finished selvage by the time the reader gets to the end of the book, but the journey they have been taken on is so immersive, so grounded in a place and the characters that inhabit it, that it hardly matters."" —Cassandra Drudi, Quill and Quire (starred review) ""It's ambitious . . . [The reader] can tap into the author’s manic rhythm and admire the density of the world he creates . . . his technical mastery has generated all kinds of complex flavours, so long as one can stomach the initial shock of the taste."" —Amanda Perry, Literary Review of Canada ""Christophe Bernard reveals himself as a master of epic storytelling."" —CBC Books ""The Hollow Beast is a sprawling story of generational feuds and old hostilities that refuse to die . . . the novel also unfurls like a knowing parody of such epics, blending hallucinatory moments and possibly nonexistent cryptids with a decades-spanning narrative."" —Tobias Carroll, Words Without Borders ""While The Hollow Beast itself is a beast of a novel, despite its hefty page count it moves along at a leisurely clip, as though the reader is hearing the tall tale around the table at the local pub or late at night in the kitchen during a house party, with the lilt and cadence of an eloquent and well-soused Francophone, peppered throughout with allusions to Quebec history, Metallica's Kill 'Em All and the Montreal Canadiens, among others."" —Sheldon Birnie, Winnipeg Free Press ""Leave[s] a mark on the broader landscape of CanLit. The author travelled far and wide before diving into novel writing, and absorbed important lessons from modern literary greats, channelling his experiences and influences into a singular voice."" —Open Book ""From rural Quebec, a sprawling, antic, alcohol-soaked family saga centered on a feud with the postman . . . full of slapstick and fresh, lively language and outlandishness . . . it's rollicking, inventive fun."" —Kirkus Reviews “Mixing family history with local lore, the satirical novel The Hollow Beast is a tale of revenge and hauntings.” —Isabella Zhou, Foreword Reviews ""Bernard’s hilarious tome is a hundred-proof fever dream of bizarre scenarios and Canada’s most outlandish cast of characters . . . But readers beware. Your technicolor nightmares will be fueled by The Hollow Beast."" —Eric Smith, Manhattan Book Review ""A master of epic storytelling, The Hollow Beast is an inherently fascinating saga of a read from start to finish."" —Midwest Book Review “Quebecois writer Bernard debuts with a feverish burlesque about a one-time hockey player’s decades-long dispute with a referee and his grandson’s attempts to reverse the family curse . . . Bernard’s bawdiness and mania credibly evoke Thomas Pynchon’s flights of invention.” —Publishers Weekly ""A controversial goal at a 1911 hockey game in the Gaspé Peninsula leads to a family vendetta that spans more than three generations and 100 years, shaping the destinies of a small town and its inhabitants. With The Hollow Beast, translator Lazer Lederhendler brings Quebec author Christophe Bernard’s 2018 Governor General’s Literary Award–shortlisted novel to English readers."" —Cassandra Drudi, Quill and Quire ""Christophe Bernard has hollowed out the past like a beast and, like an alchemist, has excavated a language of pure gold. He has added a great, savage nugget to Quebec literature."" —La Presse (Montreal) ""Christophe Bernard scores a huge hit with The Hollow Beast . . . He gives birth to a sort of crazed novel in the form of a fireworks show . . . Bernard slips into the patchwork skin of a kind of Thomas Pynchon crossbred with Rabelais and Victory-Lévy Beaulieu (with a pint of James Joyce) . . . His writing is flamboyant with vernacular flights. An example of utter mastery."" —Le Devoir (Montreal) ""The reader swims in sheer delirium reading The Hollow Beast, a novel from the Gaspé that takes place over several generations. Passionate and unsettling . . . A universe plugged in at 10,000 volts!” —Radio Canada ""A tale with plenty of momentum that covers a whole century and is at once fantastic, funny, cruel, brilliant."" —Le Journal de Montréal ""A family saga unlike any other . . . And it's funny! I envy this writer's talent."" —L'Actualité (Montreal)"