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Bruno Salvador, known to friends and enemies alike as Salvo, is the ever-innocent, twenty-nine-year-old orphaned love-child of a Catholic Irish missionary and a Congolese headman's daughter. Educated first at mission school in the East Congolese province of Kivu, and later at a discreet sanctuary for the secret sons of Rome, Salvo is inspired by his mentor Brother Michael to train as a professional interpreter in the minority African languages of which, almost from birth, he has been an obsessive collector. Soon a rising star in his profession, he is courted by City corporations, hospitals, law courts, the Immigration services and - inevitably - the mushrooming overworld of British Intelligence. He is also courted - and won - by the all-white, Surrey-born Penelope, star reporter on one of our great national newspapers, whom with typical impulsiveness he promptly marries. Yet even as the story opens, a contrary and irresistible love is dawning in him. Despatched to a no-name island in the North Sea to attend a top-secret meeting between Western financiers and East Congolese warlords, Salvo is obliged to interpret matters never intended for his re-awoken African conscience.
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The mission song, John le Carré
- Langue
- Année de publication
- 2007
- product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
- (souple),
- État du livre
- Bon
- Prix
- 1,19 €
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- Titre
- The mission song
- Langue
- Anglais
- Auteurs
- John le Carré
- Éditeur
- Hodder & Stoughton
- Publié
- 2007
- Format
- souple
- Pages
- 339
- ISBN10
- 0340922001
- ISBN13
- 9780340922002
- Séries
- Mots clés
- Fiction, Polars & Thrillers, Thriller, Politique, Suspense, Prose de guerre, Guerres, Afrique, Angleterre, Cadeaux pour les messieurs, Secrets, Grande-Bretagne, Espionnage, Mystèrieux, Londres, Romans d'espionnage, Trahison, Lutte pour le pouvoir, Corruption, Congo, Interprètes
- Titre original
- The mission song
- Évaluation
- 3,35 sur 5
- Description
- Bruno Salvador, known to friends and enemies alike as Salvo, is the ever-innocent, twenty-nine-year-old orphaned love-child of a Catholic Irish missionary and a Congolese headman's daughter. Educated first at mission school in the East Congolese province of Kivu, and later at a discreet sanctuary for the secret sons of Rome, Salvo is inspired by his mentor Brother Michael to train as a professional interpreter in the minority African languages of which, almost from birth, he has been an obsessive collector. Soon a rising star in his profession, he is courted by City corporations, hospitals, law courts, the Immigration services and - inevitably - the mushrooming overworld of British Intelligence. He is also courted - and won - by the all-white, Surrey-born Penelope, star reporter on one of our great national newspapers, whom with typical impulsiveness he promptly marries. Yet even as the story opens, a contrary and irresistible love is dawning in him. Despatched to a no-name island in the North Sea to attend a top-secret meeting between Western financiers and East Congolese warlords, Salvo is obliged to interpret matters never intended for his re-awoken African conscience.








