• Ayaan Hirsi Ali
    Ayaan Hirsi Ali was born in Mogadishu, Somalia in 1969.  The daughter of a political opponent of the Somali dictatorship, Ayaan Hirsi Ali grew up surrounded by her family in exile. Her traditional Muslim upbringing continued from Somalia to Saudi Arabia, then to Ethiopia and Kenya.

  • Eli Anderson
    Eli Anderson (whose real name is Thierry Serfaty) started off as a young doctor whose medical studies took him from France to Denmark and Canada. He interned in child psychiatrics and pediatric oncology, and wrote his doctoral dissertation in pediatric psychology on the significance of illness for children. During this time, his experience working with children and writing lead him to mix his imagination with his knowledge, his curiosity with his experience, and he started to write Oscar Pill.

  • Filippo d'Angelo
    Filippo d'Angelo was born in Genoa in 1973. A specialist in 17th century Libertine literature, he has taught at la Sorbonne in Paris, where he now lives. The Other World is his first novel.

  • Antoine Audouard
    Antoine Audouard was born in Paris in 1956, the son of journalist and writer Yvan Audouard, and grandson of Surrealism companion André Thirion, who wrote Revolutionaries without a Revolution.

  • Diaryatou Bah
    Diaryatou Bah was born in Guinea in 1985. Today, she is the National Coordinator for the forty-one chapters of the feminist organization Ni Putes, Ni Soumises. One of France's most prominent women's rights associations, its mission is to protect women in the ghettos from the oppression and violence of radical Islam. She is the author of the memoir The Courage to Leave (2006). And Still a Muslim is her most recent work.

  • Tony Bartelme
    Tony Bartelme is the senior projects reporter for The Post and Courier in Charleston, South Carolina. In 2011, Bartelme was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for his series of articles which is the basis for Brain Surgery in the Bush.

  • Jean-Dominique Bauby
    After suffering a massive stroke, Jean-Dominique Bauby, editor-in-chief of French Elle and the father of two young children, found himself completely paralysed and speechless. Able only to move one eyelid, he ‘dictated’ this remarkable book.

  • Ingrid Betancourt
    Ingrid Betancourt's story - her exemplary courage, spirit and resilience - has captured the world's imagination. Held captive by the FARC in the depths of the Colombian jungle for six and a half years, she was freed on July 2nd 2008.

  • François Bizot
    Francois Bizot is an ethnologist who has spent the greater part of his career studying South-East Asian Buddhism and has lived in various countries of the the Indochinese peninsula since 1965. He has taught at the Sorbonne and the Ecole Pratique des Hautes-etudes and is professor emeritus at the Ecole Française de l'Extrême Orient.

  • Claus von Bohlen
    Claus von Bohlen was born in London in 1977. He read Philosophy and Spanish at Oxford University, before stints in film production and publishing. Following a masters in psychology, he is now based in Gaza, where he works for the Gaza Community Mental Health Programme. His first novel Who is Charli Conti? was published by Old Street in 2008.

  • Stephen Clarke
    Stephen Clarke was born in St Albans, England, and grew up in Bournemouth ("England's answer to Malibu"), where he played bass in some of the worst rock bands in musical history before leaving town to study French and German at Oxford. He gained a first-class degree in Modern Languages, but refused to go for interviews with any big companies, and was told by his tutor, "if you have any children, don't send them here."  The tutor has since died.

  • André Comte-Sponville
    André Comte-Sponville is one of France’s preeminent contemporary philosophers.

  • Guy Corneau
    Guy Corneau is the author of several books about personal development including The Best Is Still to Come and Beyond Fear

  • Thierry Cruvellier
    Thierry Cruvellier, 44, former editor of the online newsletter International Justice Tribune, is currently based in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, where he covers the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC). Cruvellier was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University and holds a Masters in Journalism from Sorbonne University, Paris. He is the author of Court of Remorse-Inside the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (Wisconsin University Press, 2010). 

  • Tom Darling
    Tom Darling was born in Oxford in 1978 and grew up in Norfolk and Cornwall.  He has an M.Phil. in Creative Writing from Trinity College, Dublin. Over the years he has worked as a scriptwriter and editor, a farmhand, a forester, and a freelance journalist.

  • Zlata Filipovic
    Zlata Filipovic was born in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1980. At the age of ten, she started keeping a diary, which, when the conflict began in former Yugoslavia, became a record of the war and survival in her city. Zlata's Diary was published first in France in 1993 and was an instant international best-seller. It has since been translated into thirty-six languages and is required reading in many schools around the world.

  • Michèle Fitoussi
    Michèle Fitoussi has worked for the past twenty-five years at Elle magazine. Her journalism has often focussed on the challenges facing women and was the co-author of The Prisoner, about a young Moroccan woman imprisoned with her family for twenty years under the reign of Hassan II, was an international bestseller. She is also a screenwriter and novelist.

  • Lora Gordon
    Lora Gordon was born in 1982. She is currently completing her Master's in Political Science in Paris.

  • Chekeba Hachemi
    Chekeba Hachemi is an Afghan woman who fled Kabul with her family in the early 1980s when she was eleven years old. She grew up in Paris, founded an NGO in support of women's education in Afghanistan, Aghanistan Libre, and recently founded Roz, a magazine for Afghan women that discusses key issues such as women's rights and education, which has become the most read women's magazine in the country.   Chekeba Hachemi currently lives in London. She is fluent in English, French, and Afghan.

  • Louisa Hall
    Louisa Hall was born in Philadelphia in 1982. She is currently a PhD candidate at the University of Texas at Austin, but before moving to Texas she played squash professionally for eight years.  In the middle of that time, she studied English at Harvard. The Carriage House is her first novel, though she has had poetry published in journals such as The New RepublicThe Southwest Review, and Ellipsis

  • Marie de Hennezel
    The latest book by the author of the international best-seller Intimate Death is quickly climbing the French bestseller lists. In The Warmth of the Heart Keeps the Body From Rusting, Marie de Hennezel's makes full use of her experience as a psychologist to look at how we can all develop a personal “art of growing old”, avoiding the psychological pitfalls of ageing.

  • Duong Thu Huong
    Duong Thu Huong was born in the Thai Binh province of North Vietnam in 1947. At the age of twenty, she led a Communist Theatrical Youth Brigade sent to the front during the Vietnam War to support the troops’ morale. She was an active patriot in her youth, foregoing an offer to study abroad in favor of serving her country. She was shocked to discover that the “American war” was also a civil war.

  • Rustam Ibragimbekov
    Rustam Ibragimbekov was born in Baku, Azerbaijan in 1939. He is an internationally renowned and multi-award winning screenwriter, dramatist and producer. In 2000, he was made a ‘Commandeur de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres’, one of France’s most prestigious cultural awards. His writing credits include more than 40 film and television scripts, plays and prose. In 1994, Burnt by the Sun was awarded the Grand Prix at Cannes and an Oscar for Best Foreign Film.

  • Sabatina James
    Sabatina James runs the Sabatina EV Foundation, which offers aid and legal counseling to girls at risk of arranged marriages. She has spoken internationally on the topics of honor killings and forced marriage. Her most recent book, The Truth Will Set You Free, was published by Droemer in September 2011.

  • Ondine Khayat
    Ondine Khayat is 35 years old. She lives in Paris and speaks fluent English. This is her third novel and it was previously published by Editions Anne Carrière.   In April 2010, Glamour Magazine in France named Ondine Khayat a Glamour hero for her role in setting up Bet for a Better World, the world's first ever humanitarian lottery. This lottery is currently being set up as a national lottery in France, with plans in place to take it to an international level. Income from the lottery will fund humanitarian ...

  • Clara Kramer
    Clara (Schwarz) Kramer was born in 1927, in Zolkiew, a town in the Galicia section of Poland (currently a part of the Ukraine).  In an attempt to escape the Germans in 1941, fifteen year old Clara and her family were joined by several other families as they hid together in an underground bunker.  For almost two years, the eighteen people were hidden by righteous Christians, Valentin Beck and his family, who risked their lives, even while German soldiers shared the home with them, for prolonged periods of time. 

  • Wendy Law-Yone
    Wendy Law-Yone is the author of The Road to Wanting, Irrawaddy Tango, and The Coffin Tree. Her short stories have appeared in Grand Street and anthologies of erotica, and her book reviews and articles in The Washington Post Atlantic Monthly, Architectural Digest, and Time Magazine.

  • Frédéric Lenoir
    Frédéric Lenoir is a writer, philosopher and specialist in religions.  He is the editor in chief of Le monde des religions and the author of numerous best-selling non-fiction books.

  • Marc Levy
    Marc was born on October 16, 1961 in France. At the age of eighteen, he joined the Red Cross and within three years was appointed Regional Director of the Western Paris Department of Emergency Relief.

  • Sabri Louatah
    Sabri Louatah is twenty-eight years old and lives in Paris, France. Thanks to his insatiable appetite for American writers, his English is fluent. In 2005, while riots were breaking out across France, he read Demons by Dostoyevsky, and was inspired to write this novel. 

  • Somaly Mam
    "The perfect counterpoint to fatalism is Somaly Mam, one of the bravest and boldest..." - Nicholas Kristof, The New York Times

  • Fernando Morais
    Fernando Morais is one of Brazil's most famous journalists. Writing for the Jornal da Tarde and Veja magazine, he is a three-time recipient of the Esso Prize and has four-time winner of the Abril Journalism Award. His books include Olga, published by Grove/Atlantic. Morais has also served as São Paulo State congressman and Secretary for Culture and Education.

  • Philippe Presles
    As a doctor, Philippe Presles' humanist outlook has led him to specialize in preventative medicine as well as the economics of health and ethics. He has been researching consciousness for over fifteen years. Presles is the author of Prévenir (Robert Laffont, 2006) and holds an MBA from HEC Business School.

  • José Manuel Prieto
    José Manuel Prieto was born in Havana, Cuba. After finishing high school, he left Havana for Russia and eventually lived in Saint Petersburg. Now living in New York and teaching at Cornell, Prieto has written short stories, travel accounts, and (highly commended) novels.

  • Michel Quint
    Michel Quint was born in France in 1949. A French literature and theatre studies teacher he is also the author of several short stories and crime novels. In 1989 he was awarded the Grand Prix de Littérature Policière for his novel Billard à l’étage. Effroyables Jardins, his novel inspired by his own father’s life story, became a huge bestseller in France at its publication in 2000. Translated into 15 languages, it has been adapted several times for the theatre. The film adaptation was directed by Jean Becker.

  • Alan Riding
    Alan Riding was born in Brazil to British parents and was educated in Britain as an economist and a lawyer. Eventually he opted for a career in journalism, moving from London to New York with Reuters and then to Mexico with The Financial Times. In Mexico, Riding joined The New York Times and remained with the paper for 30 years.

  • Flemming Rose
    Flemming Rose is cultural editor of Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten. He spent fourteen years as foreign correspondent in Russia and in the US, and currently lives in Denmark. He is fluent in Danish, English, and Russian.

  • Adam Ross
    Adam Ross was born and raised in New York City and now lives in Nashville, Tennessee, with his wife and two daughters. Mr. Peanut, his first novel, will be published in thirteen countries. 

  • Marcel Rufo
    Marcel Rufo is head of child psychiatry at the Sainte-Marguerite hospital in Marseille and a respected specialist in the field of infant and adolescent psychology.

  • Fanny Saintenoy
    Fanny Saintenoy is thirty-nine years old and lives in Paris with her two children. Just Before is her first novel.

  • Thierry Serfaty
    Thierry Serfaty is the author of six thrillers, and lives in Paris. He has been translated in a dozen languages. His website is www.thierryserfaty.com.

  • David Servan-Schreiber
    After a 20 year battle with cancer, David Servan-Schreiber passed away on July 24, 2011.

  • Jocelyn Seagrave
    Jocelyn Seagrave was born in 1968 in Thailand, and she was brought up in Asia and the US. She is the daughter of the acclaimed novelist Wendy Law Yone and bestselling author Sterling Seagrave.    
    In 2008, Jocelyn went back to Burma just before Cyclone Nargis, one of the worst cyclones in Burma's history, which devastated the country and took close to 200 000 lives.   
    Today Jocelyn lives in St. Louis with her husband and two children. This is her first novel.

  • Sophie van der Stap
    Sophie van der Stap was 21 years old when she was diagnosed with a rare form of cancer. The Girl with the Nine Wigs, her fresh and candid account of the illness, was a best-seller in Holland.

  • Danielle Thiéry
    Danielle Thiéry, one of France’s highest-ranking police officers, was the first woman in France to be appointed to the post of Police Commissioner. Since 1997, she has devoted her spare time to writing, directly inspired by the investigations that she has led, developing a television series, an autobiographical novel (Prix Bourgogne), and eight thrillers (Prix Polar).

  • Rajesh Thind
    Rajesh Thind is 35 years old. He’s a writer, producer and director; he’s written for The Independent, Time Out, Vertigo and Diplo magazine and made films for Channel 4, the BBC, ITV, Al-Jazeera International, and the Arts Council of England. He graduated from Manchester University and Goldsmiths College, where he has also tutored. He is currently living in India working on the book and documentary film of The Family Farm: Twelve Acres in the Punjab.

  • Tzvetan Todorov
    An essayist, historian and philosopher of world renown, Tzvetan Todorov has taught at universities in the United States and France's Centre Nationale de la Recherche Scientifique, where he was a Director of Research. He is the author of many books, including In Defence of the Enlightenment, Hope and Memory, The New World Disorder, and the The Apostles of Beauty.

  • Miklós Vámos
    Miklós Vámos is a Hungarian writer, who has published 28 books. He has been correspondent for The Washington Post and The Nation and taught at Yale; he has also written short stories, plays and film scripts; but as the author of eleven novels, he feels that he was born to be a novelist.

  • Michael Wallner
    Michael Wallner was born in Graz, Austria, in 1958. He has worked as an actor and screenwriter. He divides his time between Berlin and the Black Forest and is the author of 6 novels.