Yasmina Khadra
- Writer
Yamina Khadra is a very productive Algerian writer. He always felt like
a writer, even though he was an officer in the Algerian army for 36
years. He was born in the Sahara Desert. His father was a male nurse
and his mother was a nomad. In 1964 his father sent him to a military
school in Algeria, where he discovered literature and his love for
writing. He chose to write in French because his French teacher
encouraged him and also because of the censorship of the Algerian
authorities. He started with short stories in 1973 in a book called
"Houria". In 1975 he joined the Military Academy of Cherchell, where he
became on officer. He resigned from the army in 2000 because his
writing activity was not compatible with his military duties. After
producing a couple of books of short stories, he decided to write some
thrillers, to take place during the dreadful years of terrorism in
Algeria. He also created at the same time his alter ego, Commissaire
Mohammed Llob, his personal spokesman for a present-day Algeria. He
revealed his true name and story in his autobiography, "L'Ecrivain", in
2001. He explained that his nickname comes from his wife's surnames,
because he admires the courage of women in general and of his wife in
particular. The rights of his book "L'Attentat" ("The Attack") were
bought by the producers of Brokeback Mountain (2005). His latest book, "Les Sirenes de
Bagdad", is about the conflict in Iraq. Yasmina Khadra is now living in
Aix en Provence in the south of France with his wife and three
children.