Yasmina Khadra
WriterAbout
An Algerian novelist, Yasmina Khadra was born in the Sahara. At the age of nine, his father put him in military cadet school, where he was destined for a career as an officer. He published six novels from 1984 to 1989 under his real name, Mohammed Moulessehoul. In 1989, military regulations imposed a censorship board which obliged him to write in secret for 11 years, before definitively choosing to write under the pseudonym Yasmina Khadra, made up of his wife’s first names. The writer retired from the army in September 2000 to concentrate on literature. His works such as “The Swallows of Kabul,” “The Attack” and “What the Day Owes the Night” have been adapted into films, comic books and plays, have been published in 58 countries and have touched millions of readers.