Le Clezio's first several works when he was very young were all translated. His work then tended towards the experimentation of the the Nouveau Romanticists like Robbe-Grillet, Butor etc. At least he was typecast as one of a second wave of that grouping. I don't think the numbers ever added up and most of these early books are now hard to find. From the mid 70's to the mid 80's he continued to published in France but his work was no longer being translated. In the meantime however he became less experimental and more story and character focused--although thematically he's still more or less the same. In the last 10-15 years some of those later works have come out sporadically-they were as before shortprinted by smaller niche publishers. Anyway I like his early experimental books and I like the later more conventional works--I do have all but one of his early works and when he won the Nobel--the values of these rarities skyrocketed. My wife was like 'Sell them! Sell them!' and I was like 'What are you nuts?' He is a favorite writer of mine. I'm not going to sell them--at least not unless the sky falls.