Franck Pavloff Explained

Franck Pavloff
Birth Date:24 April 1940
Birth Place:Nîmes, France
Nationality:French

Franck Pavloff (born 24 April 1940) is a French psychologist, novelist, and poet.[1] Franck Pavloff currently lives in Isère, in eastern France, between trips. His Bulgarian father raised him in a way to develop a critical mind and a need for freedom, bequeathing him "the imperious taste of barbed wire and shoving confiscated thoughts" (blurb for the short story Brown Morning).

Life experience

He spent over twenty years between Africa, Asia, Latin America, and France working in the fields of social communities development and the defence of children's rights. He is an expert psychologist for the Courts of Appeals.[2]

His first novel was published in 1993 by Editions Gallimard in the Série Noire collection. Up until now, he has written 25 other books in the themes of romantic fiction, young adult fiction, travel diary and poetry.

His short story Brown Morning published by Cheyne editions in 1998 has achieved international success. With about two million copies sold in France, it was also translated into 25 languages and adapted into an opera in 2007, by composer Bruno Giner.

His last adult novels, published with Albin Michel are the following: The Bridge Ran-Mositar (Albin Michel) Price-France Télévisions in 2005, "The Chapel of Appearances" (2007), "The great exile" (Literary Award for Large spaces, 2009), "The man with the bear's shoulders" (released in 2012, Frontier Award Letters in 2013 Readers' Choice Award of Mouans Sartoux in 2013).

Works

Novels, short stories

Youth

Poetry

External links

Brown Morning review

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Matin Brun - Biographie de Franck Pavloff. www.etudier.com. fr. 2019-06-26. subscription.
  2. http://www.obrien.ie/franck-pavloff O'Brien Press
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=_CUQAAAACAAJ&q=Books+by+Franck+Pavloff Brown
  4. https://books.google.com/books?id=xTk0pGscAjsC&q=Books+by+Franck+Pavloff Brown Morning