Human Love

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Sceptre, 2008 - Fiction - 249 pages
Review: "This story takes place in an Africa far darker and more terrible than even Conrad imagined, in the midst of an insane African war somewhere along the border between Angola and Zaire. The novel's hero is Elias Almeida, a black revolutionary whose father was killed when Elias was still a child, and whose mother, to feed him, was forced to prostitute herself. Saved from almost certain death by a Catholic priest, Elias becomes a brilliant pupil, seemingly destined for greatness. But the searing memory of his parents turns him into an important cog in the worldwide revolutionary movement, sending him to Cuba and the Soviet Union to be trained for espionage and sabotage, first in his native Angola, still struggling to liberate itself from the colonial yoke, and then to other political hot spots. Yet Elias the revolutionary is also a romantic idealist, who believes in love, beauty, and the possibility of forging a better world."

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About the author (2008)

Andrei Makine was born in Siberia in 1957. Although raised in the Soviet Union, he learned about France and came to love that country through the stories told by his French grandmother. He now lives in Paris himself, having been granted political asylum by France in 1987, and writes in French. His grandmother figures prominently in the autobiographical novel, "Dreams of My Russian Summers," for which Makine received both the Goncourt Prize and the Medicis Prize, becoming the first author to simultaneously receive both of these prestigious French awards. In the U.S., the English translation of "Dreams of My Russian Summers" has also received recognition, including the Boston Book Review Fiction Prize and the Los Angeles Times Best Book of the Year award. Andrei Makine is also the author of "Once Upon the River Love" and "The Crime of Olga Arbelina."

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