33 Between Two Worlds - Olivier Norek
This book has been translated from French, Olivier Norek was for 18 years a former police officer in the Seine-St Denis-District of Paris and drawn on those experiences to become a top French crime writer, he was also one of the writers on my favourite French Police/Legal drama series, Spiral.
This book is hard hitting and shocking. It opens in Damascus, with Adam Sarkis a Captain in Syrian dictator Assad's military police, although covertly a member of the Free Syrian Army, fearing he is about to be exposed he knows he has to leave Syria, but not before, arranging for his wife and daughter to also be spirited away, the only option open to them is through Lebanon and then on to Libya and the perils of crossing the Mediterranean via a traffickers boat.
Meanwhile Adam travelling after their departure, reaches The Jungle refugee camp of Calais, where he has arranged to meet his family, a family never to arrive. Police Lieutenant Bastien Miller has been seconded from the Parisian Banlieues to Calais and it is here that their paths cross when Adam saves a young African boy from ongoing sexual abuse at the hands of Afghan men when he accompanies the young injured boy to a local hospital. Bastien approaches Adam in the hope he will pass on vital information from the camp.
Adam is a man of honour who takes the Sudanese child under his protection, a boy who has escaped the horrors of seeing his family murdered before his eyes and then being forced into an army to fight and kill for a cause of which he has no idea of their aims. The narrative of why people flee is told through the experiences of both Adam and the young boy and encompassed in the camps are the best and the very worst of humanity, disparate and unconnected vying for space and supremacy but mainly with an overwhelming desire to eventually reach the "Yukai" a land of milk and honey allegedly!
The book pulls no punches of life inside the encampment, overlords, traffickers, sexual groomers, paedophiles and murderers are all there and the main components that drive the story along. As is the desperation of the refugees and how they are exploited by others in the same position. Also apparent is the ongoing discontent of the people of Calais seeing their homes invaded and lose value. Meanwhile, truckers are running the gauntlet of migrants trying to covertly board their lorries as they approach Calais and the preventative measures of the police trying to stop them. There are several unforeseen twists before the book reaches it's conclusion. It was mooted as a crime book like no other and I think that's a fair assessment. I imagine Olivier Norek's previous career gave him an insight into the horrors of a parallel world. A very sobering read.