
Rose est une jeune biologiste. Elle fait des recherches à Paris et à New York sur une luciole, Lamprohiza splendidula, qui semble très prometteuse pour la recherche médicale. Si elle étudie avec grande maîtrise l'alchimie sexuelle des insectes et leur reproduction, elle se trouve totalement désemparée face à Léo quand elle en tombe amoureuse. La vie n'est pas comme dans un laboratoire. Et ce n'est pas sa mère (cachée derrière des lunettes noires) ni sa grand-mère (qui parle à Dieu et à ses doigts de pied) qui vont pouvoir l'aider. Bed bug ou le désarroi amoureux d'une femme au bord d'un lit. « Une romancière irrésistible. » « Des histoires bien troussées, racontées avec intelligence, générosité et ambition. » Le Point « La littérature qui donne un peu d'espoir » Le Monde « Et si elle était, à sa façon, moderne, une écumeuse des petits riens qui font les grandes choses, des observations les plus ténues, des couleurs de l'âme ? » Le Parisien
Author

Katherine Pancol moved from Casablanca to France when she was five. She studied literature and initially became a French and Latin teacher, before turning to journalism. While working for Paris-Match and Cosmopolitan, she is noticed by an intuitive publisher who encourages her to begin writing. Following the success of her first novel Moi D'abord (Me First) in 1979, Pancol moves to New York City where she spends the next decade pursuing creative writing and screenwriting classes at Columbia University while producing three more novels La Barbare in 1981, Scarlett, si possible and Les hommes cruels ne courent pas les rues. Influenced by the American way of life, her style becomes even more enjoyable, action packed and fast paced. Pancol's insights into human psychology, and particularly women, are amazingly accurate and her sense of details often shaded with wry humor. Her gift to lift people's spirits while providing great entertainment has been key to her success, inspiring many women to dare to be themselves while keeping a positive relationship with life itself. Her novel The Yellow Eyes of Crocodiles (published in 2006) has been a huge success in France, where it sold more than one million copies and received the "Prix de Maison de la Presse, 2006" for largest distribution in France. Katherine Pancol was awarded "Best author 2007" by Gorodets Publishing (Moscow). The Yellow Eyes of Crocodiles was the 6th best sold book in France in 2008 (Le Figaro Littéraire). The Yellow Eyes of Crocodiles is already being translated into Russian, Chinese, Ukrainian, Polish, Italian, Korean, Vietnamese and Norwegian. Katherine Pancol is divorced and has two grown children. She lives in Paris, France where she is currently writing the third sequel to The Yellow Eyes of Crocodiles. Pancol updates her blog every week on her web-site (http://www.katherine-pancol.com). - from Wikipedia