Adélaïde Fassinou

Adélaïde H. Edith Bignon Fassinou (born September 15, 1955, in Porto-Novo) is a Beninese writer and Benin's General Secretary for UNESCO. She has written four novels in French. Her married name is Allagbada.[1]

Publications

  • Modukpè, le rêve brisé. Paris: L'Harmattan (Collection Encres Noires no 194), 2000. (130 pp.). ISBN 978-2-7384-9091-9. Novel.
  • Yémi ou le miracle de l'amour. Cotonou (Bénin): Editions du Flamboyant, 2000 (142 pp.). ISBN 99919-41-04-5.
  • L'Oiseau messager. Cotonou: Editions Ruisseaux d'Afrique, 2002 (24 pp.). ISBN 99919-972-3-7.
  • Toute une vie ne suffirait pas pour en parler. Paris: L'Harmattan, 2002 (194 pp.). ISBN 2-7475-3344-1. Nouvelles.
  • Enfant d'autrui, fille de personne. Cotonou: Editions du Flamboyant, 2003 (172 pp.). ISBN 99919-41-39-8. Roman.
  • Jeté en pâture. Paris: L'Harmattan, 2005 (228 pp.). ISBN 2-7475-8718-5. Roman.
  • La petite fille des eaux. Bertoua/Cameroun: Editions Ndzé: 2006 (96 pp.). ISBN 2-911464-12-5. Roman (co-written with 10 other writers).
gollark: Well, it could be attached to a bicycle.
gollark: Just because a human cannot practically produce 1MW of useful power output doesn't mean you couldn't make a bicycle generator theoretically capable of producing that much, and run it off some other mechanical device.
gollark: Actually, the elves have mostly been replaced by automated manufacturing nowadays.
gollark: It's been sentient for ages, did you REALLY not notice?
gollark: Oh right, I got that from HERE, oops.

References


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