L’auteur congolais remporte la 6e édition du Prix avec "Le Psychanalyste de Brazzaville", publié aux éditions Les Lettres Mouchetées
Albert Samson is ecstatic when he finally gets his private investigator's license back. It's taken years and he's been through some very low times. But now the worst is over, at last.And within days he has a couple of cases. Granted, one is a freebie, investigating vandalism at a neighbourhood church. But the other is the best-paying job he's ever had. He's working for lawyers defending a man accused of terrifying Indianapolis women for years. Well, everyone's entitled to a defence.The only snag is that the arresting officer on the case was Samson's childhood friend, now a captain in the Indy police. Well, never mind. It was, after all, this 'friend' who cost Samson his license in the first place. As Samson investigates both cases, he is led into territory far beyond what at first appears likely. And he involves some unlikely helpers, including his mother and his daughter - now all growed up and thinking about her own future. One possibility would be to join the detective agency, making it Samson & Daughter.
Il n'y a pas encore de discussion sur ce livre
Soyez le premier à en lancer une !
L’auteur congolais remporte la 6e édition du Prix avec "Le Psychanalyste de Brazzaville", publié aux éditions Les Lettres Mouchetées
Léonie, jeune fille amputée d'un bras doit quitter ses parents, et se retrouve seule en plein milieu de l'océan !
Kiyémis rend un très bel hommage aux femmes qui se battent contre le déterminisme social...
Un petit tas d'ordures trouvé sur un trottoir va susciter chez la narratrice une suite de réflexions et de pensées étranges...