
"Un lion dans toute la force terrible de l'espèce et dans sa robe superbe. Le flot de la crinière se répandait sur le mufle allongé contre le sol. Et entre les pattes de devant, énormes, qui jouaient à sortir et à rentrer leurs griffes, je vis Patricia. Son dos était serré contre le poitrail du grand fauve. Son cou se trouvait à portée de la gueule entrouverte. Une de ses mains fourrageait dans la monstrueuse toison."
Author

Joseph Kessel was a French journalist and novelist. He was born in Villa Clara, Entre Ríos, Argentina, because of the constant journeys of his father, a Lithuanian doctor of Jewish origin. Kessel lived the first years of his childhood in Orenburg, Russia, before the family moved to France. He studied in Nice and Paris, and took part in the First World War as an aviator. Kessel wrote several novels and books that were later represented in the cinema, notably Belle de Jour (by Luis Buñuel in 1967). He was also a member of the Académie française from 1962 to 1979. In 1943 he and his nephew Maurice Druon translated Anna Marly's song Chant des Partisans into French from its original Russian. The song became one of the anthems of the Free French Forces. Joseph Kessel died in Avernes, Val-d'Oise. He is buried in the Cimetière de Montparnasse in Paris.