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Hassan Daoud

    Hassan Daoud est un écrivain et journaliste libanais dont la vie précoce à Beyrouth et ses études de littérature arabe ont façonné son œuvre ultérieure. Sa carrière journalistique a débuté pendant la guerre civile libanaise, lui offrant une perspective unique sur les bouleversements sociaux et politiques. Sa vaste œuvre de fiction, qui comprend des romans et des nouvelles, explore probablement des thèmes influencés par ces expériences. Ses œuvres, dont certaines ont été traduites en anglais, soulignent son importance dans la littérature arabe contemporaine.

    No Road to Paradise
    The Year of the Revolutionary New Bread-Making Machine
    The Penguin's Song
    Borrowed Time
    • Borrowed Time

      • 160pages
      • 6 heures de lecture
      2,7(10)Évaluer

      In a village in Lebanon, an old man prepares for his final journey. But right to the end he remains defiant - against his age, his failing body and the whims of memory; against the idle life his children try to impose on him; and, against their indifference, cruelty and greed. Fear arises and subsides in him like a tide.

      Borrowed Time
    • The Penguin's Song

      • 184pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      3,2(30)Évaluer

      Set against the backdrop of exile from Beirut, the narrative explores the struggles of a family grappling with confinement and the weight of unfulfilled hopes for returning home. Tensions arise as they navigate their complex relationships, grappling with past traumas and the harsh realities of their current situation. The story delves into themes of belonging, memory, and the impact of displacement on familial bonds.

      The Penguin's Song
    • Set against the backdrop of 1960s Beirut, the narrative offers a heartfelt and humorous exploration of the city's vibrant transformation. It captures the complexities of life during a time of change, highlighting the unique cultural and social dynamics that define the era. Through its vivid portrayal, the book delves into the hopes and challenges faced by its characters as they navigate a rapidly evolving landscape.

      The Year of the Revolutionary New Bread-Making Machine
    • No Road to Paradise

      • 306pages
      • 11 heures de lecture

      When the imam of a small town in Southern Lebanon is diagnosed with cancer, the illness he fears and has expected for years, he takes the radical decision to abandon the life he inherited from his father. He was persuaded to wear the robe and turban in his youth to preserve the family tradition and entered into an arranged marriage. While his grandfather and father were once powerful imams, he displays no interest in the mosque. The wife, for whom he feels no affection, attends to her chores and nurses his father, now sick and bedridden, in his house. Though he worries about his two sons, who were born deaf and mute, he takes no measures to secure a special education for them.

      No Road to Paradise