![]() Let me take you on a journey beyond imagining. ![]() Like a true hakawati, Rabih Alameddine has given us an Arabian Nights for this century-a funny, captivating novel that enchants and dazzles from its very first lines: “Listen. Here, too, are contemporary Lebanese whose stories tell a larger, heartbreaking tale of seemingly endless war-and of survival. Here are Abraham and Isaac Ishmael, father of the Arab tribes the ancient, fabled Fatima and Baybars, the slave prince who vanquished the Crusaders. Osama’s grandfather was a hakawati, or storyteller, and his bewitching stories-of his arrival in Lebanon, an orphan of the Turkish wars, and of how he earned the name al-Kharrat, the fibster-are interwoven with classic tales of the Middle East, stunningly reimagined. The city is a shell of the Beirut Osama remembers, but he and his friends and family take solace in the things that have always sustained them: gossip, laughter, and, above all, stories. ![]() In 2003, Osama al-Kharrat returns to Beirut after many years in America to stand vigil at his father’s deathbed. Buy the book : Book Passage | Amazon | Barnes & NobleĪn astonishingly inventive, wonderfully exuberant novel that takes us from the shimmering dunes of ancient Egypt to the war-torn streets of twenty-first-century Lebanon. ![]()
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