He has been imagining the exotic adventures of his hero Théodore Poussin for forty years.
Dressed all in black, with an elegant jacket and sunglasses, Frank Le Gall remains true to himself, funny, sometimes ironic, but so touching in his deceptively light words.
Five years after
Le Dernier Voyage de l'Amok
, his new album,
Aro Satoe,
has established itself as a great success.
He reconnects with the adventurous spray of travel literature like Kipling, Cendrars, Jules Verne or… Robert Louis Stevenson, whom he recognizes as
“his master in writing”
.
The Théodore Poussin saga offers itself here a thrilling romance worthy of legend.
The mysterious Aro Satoe, a sort of buccaneer resembling both Captain Nemo and a Malay princess, fell in love with our hero.
Read also“Blake and Mortimer remind us of our buried daydreams”
Pursued by a British major as stubborn as he is obsessive, our fleeing protagonists find refuge in the heart of a strange island, with unsuspected dangers, which, according to the author, was inspired by Fritz...
This article is for subscribers only.
You have 67% left to discover.
Flash Sale -70%
Offer available until February 28.
Without engagement.
I ENJOY IT
Already subscribed?
Login