Outremer
- 208pages
- 8 heures de lecture
A novel of faith and heresy, loyalty and intrigue, set in the 13th-century.
Nabil Saleh crée de captivantes fictions historiques et thrillers d'espionnage, tout en explorant les complexités du droit islamique concernant la banque, les sociétés et les contrats. Ses récits se caractérisent par une profonde compréhension de systèmes juridiques complexes, habilement entrelacés avec une narration captivante se déroulant dans des contextes historiques. Saleh mêle avec maestria le suspense de l'espionnage à la précision de l'analyse juridique, offrant ainsi aux lecteurs une perspective unique sur l'intersection de l'histoire, du droit et du destin humain. Son écriture témoigne d'une vaste connaissance et d'une remarquable capacité à présenter des sujets complexes de manière accessible et fascinante.



A novel of faith and heresy, loyalty and intrigue, set in the 13th-century.
A leather-bound manuscript is found hidden in a wall of a house in the rubble of Beirut in the late 1970s. It is the diary of a Muslim judge in Ottoman Beirut during 1843—a critical time for the Ottoman Empire and the European powers. The judge is Sheikh 'Abdallah bin Ahmad bin Abu Bakar al-Jabburi to the world, but simply Abu Khalid—father of Khalid—to his family and friends. In a sequence of stories and vignettes the diary tells of his work as a judge, the cases he has to deal with amid the political conspiracies and diplomatic intrigues of the times and the impact they have on his relations with others. Merchants, officials, family, friends and enemies are threaded in and out of a rich tapestry of events and reflections. A dragoman of the British Consulate seeks his help; Abu Kasim, his lifelong friend, asks for the hand of his unwilling daughter 'Aisha; and a young gypsy girl reads his palm. Subsequent family and political misfortunes change the judge's quiet life and shatter his dream of a pair of red slippers, in a dramatic crescendo with consequences he is unable to control.
Hunayn ibn Ishaq (803-873 AD) was a Christian physician of Arab descent. He, with other Nestorian physicians, practised the medicine taught by the Ancient Greeks. He was personal physician to eight caliphs and rose to such prominence that his contemporaries dubbed him 'a source of science and a mine of virtue'. He transmitted to the Abbasids a great number of Greek medical and non-medical works, translating them into Arabic, often from earlier Syriac versions and, as did other Christian physicians, he enjoyed a de facto monopoly on exercising Greek medicine in the Abbasid Empire, often commenting and adding on the works he had translated. Hunayn ibn Ishaq left a sketchy account of his life. Nabil Saleh has written a novel that purports to complete it, re-creating the background of the Abbasid court where he moved, and giving a glimpse of the daily life in Baghdad and Byzantium, during the ninth century AD. As in his earlier historical novels - Quartet published The Curse of Ezekiel, about the siege of Tyre in 332BC, in 2009 to considerable acclaim - Nabil Saleh recreates a vivid, colourful picture of ancient worlds whose legacy still touches our own.