"I consider it a great crime for adults not to put books in the hands of children," writes the author ... and he is right: his autobiography reads like a novel and gives the man extremely dynamic vision that can only encourage action to defend the causes that you believe. It is also a lesson in tolerance, an apology for the spirit of adventure that makes you forget, or at least reduced to a tiny size our daily worries, our material ambitions. Patrice Franceschi goes to the end of its physical possibilities during investigations, reports to the human service. He brings a deliberately optimistic worldview, evokes "brotherly faces," men ready "to give a part of themselves." Story of the more exciting adventures that are experienced, this book opens the mind through anecdotes, reflections "common sense". And the style is nice! So I would have liked longer continue discovering the world of men to the author's side. One complaint: the last chapters where he sums up - too - his expeditions with "The Sulky" and aligns multiple thanks. But it was probably necessary to calmly leave the book.