a year (or so) in the life of some characters in a Paris banlieue, Louveplaine. Nour has come to France from Algeria to join her husband Hassan, but when she arrives in the apartment he has rented for them he is gone, and is not to be found. The whole thing reads rather like an anthropological study of the dispossessed of the banlieues of Paris, but it is more than that. It is a good thriller too. The missing man, the secret world of dog-fighting, and creepy basements and rooftops of the tower blocks of outer Paris, where the immigrants, legal or not, are warehoused away from the City of Light. But the ancient royal forest of Louveplaine is still close to the banlieue, and somewhere out there is a stag with one horn... what happens to Hassan? What will happen to Sonny the Malian highschool boy who is old beyond his years? Will Nour build a life in France at last? I would love to see this as a TV miniseries. But anyway it has something to say, not just about France but about the developed world, where migrants make their homes, and their lives. I don't think it's been translated into English, which is a pity, but read it if you can.