Download What the Day Owes the Night PDF book free – From What the Day Owes the Night PDF: ‘Darling, this is Younes. Yesterday he was my nephew, today he is our son’ Younes’ life is changed forever when his poverty-stricken parents surrender him to the care of his more affluent uncle. Buy from Amazon
Table of Contents
What the Day Owes the Night PDF
Renamed Jonas, he grows up in a colourful colonial Algerian town, and forges a unique friendship with a group of boys, an enduring bond that nothing – not even the Algerian Revolt – will shake. He meets Emilie – a beautiful, beguiling girl who captures the hearts of all who see her – and an epic love story is set in motion. Time and again Jonas is forced to to choose between two worlds: Algerian or European; past or present; love or loyalty, and finally decide if he will surrender to fate or take control of his own destiny at last. What the Day Owes the Night PDF
Details About What the Day Owes the Night by Yasmina Khadra
- Name: What the Day Owes the Night
- Authors: Yasmina Khadra
- Publish Date: May 1, 2011
- Language: English
- Genre: Fiction, Thriller, Literature, Redemption
- Format: PDF/ePub
- Size: 1 MB
- Pages: 400
- Price: Free
Editorial Reviews – What the Day Owes the Night PDF
‘Darling, this is Younes. Yesterday he was my nephew, today he is our son’ Younes’ life is changed forever when his poverty-stricken parents surrender him to the care of his more affluent uncle. Renamed Jonas, he grows up in a colourful colonial Algerian town, and forges a unique friendship with a group of boys, an enduring bond that nothing – not even the Algerian Revolt – will shake. He meets Emilie – a beautiful, beguiling girl who captures the hearts of all who see her – and an epic love story is set in motion. Time and again Jonas is forced to to choose between two worlds: Algerian or European; past or present; love or loyalty, and finally decide if he will surrender to fate or take control of his own destiny at last. What the Day Owes the Night PDF
Biography
Yasmina Khadra is the pseudonym of the Algerian writer Mohammed Moulessehoul, born in 1956. A high ranking officer in the Algerian army, he went into exile in France in 2000, where he now lives in seclusion. In his several writings on the civil war in Algeria, Khadra exposes the current regime and the fundamentalist opposition as the joint guilty parties in the Algerian Tragedy. Before his admission of identity in 2001, a leading critic in France wrote, ‘A he or a she? It doesn’t matter. What matters is that Yasmina Khadra is today one of Algeria’s most important writers.’