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The Hakawati The Storyteller A Story Alameddine Rabih

  • SKU: BELL-7743096
The Hakawati The Storyteller A Story Alameddine Rabih
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

5.0

58 reviews

The Hakawati The Storyteller A Story Alameddine Rabih instant download after payment.

Publisher: Picador Canada
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 2.2 MB
Pages: 528
Author: Alameddine Rabih
ISBN: 9780307374837, 0307374831
Language: English
Year: 2008

Product desciption

The Hakawati The Storyteller A Story Alameddine Rabih by Alameddine Rabih 9780307374837, 0307374831 instant download after payment.

A Globe and Mail Best Book
  “In the best tradition of magical realism, [Alameddine’s] tales commingle the fabulous with the mundane, the grandiose with laugh-out-loud wit.… [It is also] a fascinating portrait of Lebanon, a country that defies stereotypes.… As it journeys effortlessly back and forth between centuries, The Hakawati is also a saga of families, tribes, and nations that are like families—sprawling, bound by birth and passion, combative, destructive, and essential.”
  —The Boston Globe
  “The Hakawati is both genius and genie out of the ink bottle, a glorious, gorgeous masterpiece of pure storytelling and fable making.… What is timeless about this story makes it very timely indeed.”
  —Amy Tan
  “A rollicking good read. Bawdy, allusive, sad, funny and universal in its themes, yet with a finely observed sense of place, The Hakawati is a splendid achievement.”
  —The Globe and Mail
  “Extraordinary.… These tales have some of the biblical brutality of the Old Testament, tempered with the subtlety and magic of Shakespeare, and the wisdom and guile of Scheherazade.… Alameddine’s is a crafted work that—like the master storyteller—works its magic by stealth.”
  —The Times Literary Supplement (London)
  “A skillfully wrought, emotional story.… Alameddine should be commended for the chances he takes, and [his] prodigious skills.… He deserves credit for telling a story the West should pay attention to, and evoking the diversity of the Arab world (Christian, Muslim, Jew and even Druze, they are all here) that is often taken for granted in our ever narrowing perspective of righteousness.… Bravely ambitious.”
  —San Francisco Chronicle
  “[An] entertaining, kaleidoscopic novel.”
  —Details
  “An epic in the oldest and newest senses, careening from the Koran to the Old Testament, Homer to Scheherazade. It’s hard to imagine the person who wouldn’t get carried away.”
  —Jonathan Safran Foer
  “Exhilarating.… Audacious.… Alameddine has great fun telling this story, and it’s infectious.”
  —San Jose Mercury News
  “Astonishingly inventive.… Alameddine’s enchanting language [has] a fascinating, lyrical quality.… He juggles his many narratives effortlessly, enhancing each with small details from the world they inhabit.”
  —Time Out Chicago
  “Captivating.… A wildly imaginative patchwork of tales improbably threading together Greek mythology, biblical parables, Arab-Islamic lore, and even modern Lebanese politics [that] charm and amuse.”
  —Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
  “No book this bewitching has ever felt so important; no book this important has ever been so lovingly enchanted. The Hakawati is both a snapshot of our current crisis, and a story for the ages. What else can we ask the djinn of literature for?”
  —Andrew Sean Greer
  “Be thankful for Rabih Alameddine’s new novel, The Hakawati.… David Bowie and Santa Claus can be found in these stories as well as Abraham, Orpheus, jinnis, sultans, crusaders, magic carpets, virgins, houris and, of course, evil viziers.… A book to be read and read again.”
  —Santa Cruz Sentinel
  “Fables, both old and new, reinterpreted by Alameddine, weave throughout a modern-day story.… In the end, the tales create an intricate tapestry that displays the complexities of a family and a culture.”
  —National Geographic Traveler
  “An Arabian Nights for the 21st century. Bewitching readers with tales of spellbinding genies and shape-shifting demons, Alameddine gives classic tales a modern twist.”
  —Rocky Mountain News
  “Astonishing: a triumph of storytelling.”
  —Aleksandar Hemon
  Rabih Alameddine
  The Hakawati
  Rabih Alameddine is the author of Koolaids, The Perv, and I, the Divine. He divides his time between San Francisco and Beirut.
  www.rabihalameddine.com
  ALSO BY RABIH ALAMEDDINE
  I, the Divine
  The Perv
  Koolaids


An inventive, exuberant novel that takes us from the shimmering dunes of ancient Egypt to the war-torn streets of twenty-first-century Lebanon.
In 2003, Osama al-Kharrat returns to Beirut after many years in America to stand vigil at his father’s deathbed. 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.
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. Here are Abraham and Isaac; Ishmael, father of the Arab tribes; the ancient, fabled Fatima; and Baybars, the slave prince who vanquished the Crusaders. Here, too, are contemporary Lebanese whose stories tell a larger, heartbreaking tale of seemingly endless war—and of survival.
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. Let me take you on a journey beyond imagining. Let me tell you a story.”

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