Writing mainly historical fiction with a prose described as vivid and forceful, critics say that Columeau, now 41, has injected fresh life into a scene considered to have grown stale.
His works have featured at the country's most prominent literature festivals with three novels published and more in the pipeline.
Originally from Marseilles, Columeau left France to study Hindi in India in 1993, but quickly grew disillusioned with the "clerical" form of the language he was being made to learn, and switched to Urdu two years later.
"Then I was practising my reading. After about one year I was able to read books," he said.
He later moved to Pakistan with the International Committee of the Red Cross where he worked primarily as a translator in troubled areas.
Columeau's first Urdu short story, Zalzala, or "earthquake", came out after the catastrophic quake of 2005 and was set between a girls' school in Pakistani Kashmir and an apartment tower in Islamabad.
He became fascinated with 1950s poet Saghar Siddiqui, who fell into ruin and destitution and acquired a saint-like following among common people before his early death.
"I wanted to explore why he became a malang (a wandering mystic) despite the fact he was a successful poet and wrote songs for movies," Columeau said of his first novel, "Saghar".
"I used the gaps in his biography in order to construct my own fiction."
After his death Siddiqui's legend grew and a shrine was built for him in the eastern city of Lahore, now mostly frequented by the working class and those looking for blessings and inspiration -- including Columeau himself.
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