Albert Russo
Albert Russo is the recipient of many awards, such as The American Society of Writers Fiction Award, The British Diversity Short Story Award, several New York Poetry Forum Awards, Amelia Prose and Poetry awards and the Prix Colette, among others. He has also been nominated for the W.B. Yeats and Robert Penn Warren poetry awards. His work, which has been praised by James Baldwin, Pierre Emmanuel, Paul Willems and Edmund White, has appeared worldwide in a dozen languages. His African novels have been favorably compared to V.S. Naipaul’s work, which was honored with the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2001. He just got an honorable mention for 'The Crowded World of Solitude', volume 1 (the collected stories),at Writer's Digest's 13th International annual Awards. He is a member of the jury for the Prix Européen (sharing the panel with Eugene Ionesco until his death) and sat in 1996 on the panel of the prestigious Neustadt Prize for Literature, which often leads to the Nobel Prize. A bilingual author, Albert Russo writes in both English and French, his two ‘mother tongues’. He speaks five languages fluently and has a vernacular and/or reading knowledge of three other languages, in this order: English, French, Italian (his 'paternal' tongue), Spanish, German, Swahili, Portuguese and Dutch. He was born in Congo/Zaire and grew up in Central and Southern Africa (Rwanda-Burundi and Zimbabwe, the land of his mother). He then left Africa for the United States and graduated from New York University (majoring in Economics and studying Psychology). He subsequently moved to northern Italy where his father (Italian-born) settled with the family and worked there in the latter's import-export business. He subsequently returned to New York, where he taught languages, worked as a translator for World Press Review (among other magazines) and adapted films for Unicef. After a stay of 8 years in the States, he moved to Paris, France, where he still resides. He was married (and divorced) twice and has two children - Tatiana and Alexandre - of whom he is very proud.Shalom Tower Syndrome (Award finalist in National Best Books 2007,USAbooknews)
Alexis, who grew up in Rwanda-Urundi, is the son of an Italian Jew and a beautiful mulatto woman. As a young adult, he now ponders over the complexity of his roots: African-European and Judeo-Christian (his mother was raised a Catholic). The author guides the reader through a progression of exciting and complicated episodes involving Alexis. […]




