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Book Review: 'The Hakawati,' by Rabih Alameddine

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  • Book Review: 'The Hakawati,' by Rabih Alameddine

    Daily Camera, CO
    Sept 12 2008


    Review: 'The Hakawati,' by Rabih Alameddine


    By Ashley Simpson Shires For the Camera
    Friday, September 12, 2008

    The Hakawati by Rabih Alameddine. Knopf, 513 pp. $25.95

    In Lebanon, a hakawati is a storyteller, a teller of myths and
    fables. "A troubadour of sorts," Rabih Alameddine writes, "someone who
    earns his keep by beguiling an audience with yarns." And Alameddine's
    novel, "The Hakawati," is beguiling, an enchanting work of fiction.

    The protagonist of the novel, Osama al-Kharrat, is a Lebanese man who
    has lived in California for a number of years. So it is especially
    startling when he returns to his homeland, to the bombed-out and
    struggling city of Beirut, where he grew up.

    Osama has returned to Beirut to see his dying father. He stands vigil
    at the hospital, but he also visits his old neighborhood, the
    apartment building that is now occupied by squatters. As he travels
    through the changed landscape, he reminisces about his large and
    colorful family and their life in the Middle East. Central to his
    memories are his grandfather, Ismail, a man who was a hakawati by
    profession. Ismail received a small weekly salary in return for
    entertaining the bey, the local chieftain ruler, with stories.

    Though many of Ismail's stories were epic Middle Eastern dramas (which
    Alameddine skillfully inserts throughout the novel), Ismail also told
    Osama fascinating stories of their family's origin -- epic Middle
    Eastern dramas in themselves. Ismail himself was the "product of an
    indiscreet affair. His father," Alameddine writes, "was Simon Twining
    -- like the tea -- an alcoholic English doctor, a missionary helping
    Christian Armenians in southern Turkey. His mother, Lucine, was one of
    the doctor's Armenian servants."

    Alameddine expands on these juicy details, revealing the history of
    the al-Kharrat family in page-turning style. Much of the tension in
    the family derives from the clash of the past and the present -- the
    discrepancies between traditional Druze customs and modern, Western
    sensibilities. This tension particularly defines the relationship
    between Osama's father and grandfather.

    Osama's father, Farid, is a businessman who opened the first car
    dealership in Beirut. Wealthy, practical and modern, he was always
    ashamed by his father's servitude to the bey and by his old-fashioned
    profession as a hakawati. Osama says, "my father tried at different
    times to get (my grandfather) to stop filling my head with fanciful
    narratives, but he never succeeded."

    Caught in the middle between his father and grandfather, not to
    mention a raging civil war, Osama chooses a secular lifestyle in
    California, becoming a graduate of UCLA's engineering school. But he
    hungers for the magic of the Middle East, for the music and stories of
    his childhood.

    Alameddine recreates this magic for the reader, seamlessly weaving
    traditional Middle Eastern tales between narratives of the al-Kharrat
    family. These tales, inspired by such texts as "A Thousand and One
    Nights," the Old Testament and the Koran, reflect the incredible
    diversity of the al-Kharrat family. They also illuminate the complex
    political and religious landscape in which the family lives. "Listen,"
    Alameddine writes, "Let me take you on a journey beyond imagining. Let
    me tell you a story."

    Alameddine's prose is effortless, irresistible. And his subject matter
    is fascinating, a rich mix of history, memory and fable, drawing from
    Christian, Jewish and Muslim traditions. The result is a gorgeous
    novel, anchored by the story of the al-Kharrat family, but bursting
    with prophets, princes, and genies as well. "The Hakawati" is an
    amazing accomplishment and a beautiful read.

    http://www.dailycamera.com/news/2008/sep/12 /telling-stories-enchanting-novel-mixes-ancient/

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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