Herve Le Tellier is a writer, journalist, mathematician, food critic, and teacher. He has been a member of the Oulipo group since 1992 and one of the ""papous"" of the famous France Culture radio show. He has published numerous books of stories, essays, memoir, and novels, including the Goncourt Prize-winning The Anomaly, which has sold more than one million copies worldwide, All Happy Families, Electrico W, and Enough About Love. Adriana Hunter studied French and Drama at the University of London. She has translated more than ninety books, including Marc Petitjean's The Heart- Frida Kahlo in Paris and Herve Le Tellier's The Anomaly and Electrico W, winner of the French-American Foundation's 2013 Translation Prize in Fiction. She lives in Kent, England.
“An inquiry that poignantly revives the valor and tragedy of World War II…tender and precise…a stripped-down labor of love…The brief life that Mr. Le Tellier carefully reconstructs illuminates an era when so many ordinary people were called on to be extraordinary.” —Wall Street Journal “A stirring tale of valor and romance, death and duty during the darkest days of World War II.” —Los Angeles Times “A historical detective story…fascinating.” —Asymptote Journal “In Le Tellier’s work of autofiction, as in Marceline Loridan-Ivens’s But You Did Not Come Back, one man’s life and sacrifice provide some illumination of history, humanity, and, ultimately, more heartbreak.” —Library Journal “Extremely moving.” —Le Monde Praise for The Anomaly: “Enthralling…a profoundly affecting examination of free will, fate, reality, and the meaning of existence, cloaked in a high-concept plot that could have come from The Twilight Zone or Black Mirror…exists in that most excellent of Venn diagrams, where high entertainment meets serious literature.” —New York Times, Best Thrillers of the Year “With its elegant mix of science fiction and metaphysical mystery, Le Tellier’s thriller is…a flight of imagination you’ll be rolling over in your mind long after deplaning.” —Washington Post