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Œuvres complètes, tome I

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Albert Cossery, écrivain égyptien de langue française, est né au Caire en 1913. Après avoir fréquenté les écoles françaises du Caire, il effectue à dix-sept ans son premier voyage à Paris pour terminer ses études. À vingt-sept ans, il publie son premier livre : Les hommes oubliés de Dieu. En 1990, il a obtenu le Grand Prix de la Francophonie pour l'ensemble de son œuvre.
Les deux volumes des œuvres complètes d'Albert Cossery mettent en lumière le magnifique talent et l'évidente cohérence des textes de cet écrivain.

CE VOLUME CONTIENT
Mendiants et orgueilleux - Les hommes oubliés de Dieu - La maison de la mort certaine - Un complot de saltimbanques.

608 pages, Paperback

First published October 6, 2005

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About the author

Albert Cossery

27 books264 followers
Albert Cossery (November 3, 1913 – June 22, 2008) was an Egyptian-born French writer of Greek Orthodox Syrian and Lebanese descent, born in Cairo.

Son of small property owners in Cairo, at the age of 17, inspired by reading Honoré de Balzac, Albert Cossery ( Arabic: البرت قصيري) emigrated to Paris. He came there to continue his studies which he never did devote himself to, writing and settled permanently in the French capital in 1945, where he lived until his death in 2008.

In 60 years he only wrote eight novels, in accordance with his philosophy of life in which "laziness" is not a vice but a form of contemplation and meditation. In his own words: "So much beauty in the world, so few eyes to see it." At the age of 27 he published his first book, Les hommes oubliés de Dieu ("Men God Forgot"). During his literary career he became close friend of other writers and artists such as Lawrence Durrell, Albert Camus, Jean Genet and Giacometti.

Cossery died on June 22, 2008, aged 94.
His books, which always take place in Egypt or other Arab countries, portray the contrast between poverty and wealth, the powerful and the powerless, in a witty although dramatic way. His writing mocks vanity and the narrowness of materialism and his principal characters are mainly vangrants, thieves or dandies that subvert the order of an unfair society.

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