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Jean-Christophe Rufin

Biography

Jean-Christophe Rufin

Jean-Christophe Rufin is one of the founders of Doctors Without Borders and a former Ambassador of France in Senegal. He has written numerous bestsellers, including THE ABYSSINIAN, for which he won the Goncourt Prize for a debut novel in 1997. He also won the Goncourt Prize in 2001 for BRAZIL RED.

Jean-Christophe Rufin

Books by Jean-Christophe Rufin

written by Jean-Christophe Rufin, translated by Alison Anderson - Fiction, Mystery

Aurel Timescu’s French is tinged with a Romanian accent, he has the disheveled air of a character from between the wars, and a past as a performer in piano bars. Nobody can quite understand how he got to be Consul. Now, he’s taken a position in French Guinea. He passes his time perspiring, drinking gallons of Tokay and composing librettos. Until, that is, a vacationer is found hanging from the mast of a sailboat. How did he end up dead, on a mast, on Aurel Timescu’s watch? Had his personal life been hanging by a thread? Was he hanging around waiting for love to be reciprocated? Had he been hanging out with the wrong crowd? Had he hung his hat on the peg of some quixotic dream?