It was the beginning of the Gulf War. I watched it on TV and did little else. I was doing badly, you see. Everything was going wrong. I just awaited the end. But then I met Victorien Salagnon, a veteran of the great colonial wars of Indochina, Vietnam and Algeria, a commander who had led his soldiers across the globe, a man with the blood of others up to his elbows. He said he would teach me to paint; he must have been the only painter in the French Forces, but out there no one cares about such things. I cared, though. In return, he wanted me to write his life story. And so he talked, and I wrote, and through him I witnessed the rivers of blood that cut channels through France, I saw the deaths that were as numberless as they were senseless and I began finally to understand the French art of war.
In alle onschuld
Alfred Kossmann
bookFlorida Woman : A Novel
Deb Rogers
audiobookMiss Jane: A Novel
Brad Watson
audiobookThe Proposal
Myung-hoon Bae
bookThe Man I Became
Peter Verhelst
bookLove in the Big City
Sang Young Park
bookInside the Mirror
Parul Kapur
audiobookYou Will Love What You Have Killed
Kevin Lambert
audiobookThe Wickedest
audiobookRiver East, River West : A Novel
Aube Rey Lescure
audiobookPierre & Jean
Guy De Maupassant
audiobookKlimtol
Etienne van Heerden
book