Jean-Christophe Rufin
The Abyssinian
A Novel"[A] fiercely imagined, entertaining novel. . . . Wildly gratifying."
Jay Parini, Boston Sunday Globe
An international bestseller; the winner of Frances Prix Goncourt for First Novel and the Prix Méditerranée. In 1699, Louis XIV of France sent an embassy to the most mysterious of oriental sovereigns, the Negus, or King, of Abyssinia (modern-day Ethiopia). Louis hope was to lure that country into the political and religious orbit of France.
Jean-Baptiste Poncet, young apothecary/physician to the pashas of Cairo, is the hero of this romantic epic embroidering upon the known details of that long-forgotten embassy. Selected by the French consul to lead the mission, Poncet travels through the deserts of Egypt and the mountains of Abyssinia to the court of the Negus, thence to Versailles and back again. Along the way he falls madly in love with the consuls daughter, treats the Negus for a mysterious skin ailment, and gains a disastrous audience with the king of France.
"A Dumas-style romp. . . . Dust, intrigue, devastating partings, and joyous reunions abound."The New Yorker
"An absorbing and unforgettable book."Los Angeles Times
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Also by this author:
The Siege of Isfahan

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