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Rabih Alameddine

Author of An Unnecessary Woman

13+ Works 2,823 Members 142 Reviews 6 Favorited

About the Author

He is a writer & artist living in San Francisco. He is the author of the critically acclaimed Koolaids: The Art of War & The Perv. (Bowker Author Biography)
Image credit: Elena Siebert

Works by Rabih Alameddine

Associated Works

Mothership: Tales from Afrofuturism and Beyond (2013) — Contributor — 146 copies
The Best American Essays 2019 (2019) — Contributor — 129 copies
The Best American Essays 2020 (2020) — Contributor — 89 copies
Dinarzad's Children: An Anthology of Contemporary Arab American Fiction (2004) — Contributor, some editions — 26 copies

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This is one of those delightful books that makes you stop and want to write down bits of it in order to remember the words forever. The cover reviewer is correct - this book does break your heart - so beware.
The main character is a so-called "unnecessary woman", living in Lebanon during the civil war. No one seems to want or need her, even her husband. She spends her life translating writers, storing up boxes of gradually bettering translations of the classics and new writers into Arabic.
I loved this complaining, grumbly women. She's 72, but I can identify with her feelings of invisibility and her need for something significant to hang onto. I traveled through this book, gradually coming to dread the end - both because I thought it would end one way (it doesn't) and because I feel I've lost the kind of person I would have loved to have spent afternoons with, discussing literature.
The true pleasure in this book are the selected words of other writers and her wise, cheeky, worldly interpretation of them.
Highly highly recommended. I found myself smiling throughout and weeping near the end. Truly a read to wallow in.
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1 vote
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Dabble58 | 83 other reviews | Nov 11, 2023 |
Interesting, SO many books to read!
 
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maryzee | 83 other reviews | Nov 1, 2023 |
The story narrates the travels of Lebanese doctor Mina Simpson to the notorious Moria refugee camp in Lesbos, Greece, after receiving an urgent call for assistance from her friend who manages an NGO there. As a Trans woman, Mina has avoided going so near to her birthplace for decades because she is estranged from her family, with the exception of her loving brother Mazen. However, Mina intends to do something significant during her week off work and without her wife of thirty years, amidst the hordes of Western volunteers who take photos with beached dinghies and the camp's kids.

Sumaiya, a very defiant Syrian matriarch who has terminal liver cancer, is soon transported across by boat. Sumaiya refuses to tell her family about her diagnosis since she is adamant about protecting her kids and spouse at any costs. Sumaiya's secret brings her together with Mina, who plans a course of therapy with the few resources at her disposal, she must face the circumstances that led to the migrants' displacement as well as her own limitations in being able to assist them.

Told through a compilation of short vignettes, I found this novel a touching and emotionally uplifting story of a trans woman's success in difficult situations. What comes through is the warmth and humanity of the heroine and her modern odyssey in theLevant.
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jwhenderson | 7 other reviews | Oct 15, 2023 |
4.5/5
Dr. Mina Simpson is a Lebanese American physician who travels to Syria to provide medical aid in the migrant camps on the Greek island of Lesbos where displaced migrants from Syria are temporarily housed till they commence on the next leg of their journey. She is joined by Emma , her friend who is a nurse, Rasheed a social worker and later her brother Mazen who still lives in Lebanon.
With them is also "the writer" who is addressed throughout the novel and is depicted as a generous person who wants to help but is too overwhelmed with what he is witnessing and tends to distance himself at times .He is is seen trying to convince Mina to write about her experiences.
“Writing simplifies life, you said, forces coherence on discordant narratives, unless it doesn’t, and most of the time it doesn’t, because really, how can one make sense of the senseless? One puts a story in a linear order, posits cause and effect, and then thinks one has arrived. Writing one’s story narcotizes it. Literature today is an opiate."
The Wrong End of the Telescope describes Mina's experiences in the refugee camp - the people she meets and befriends , the patients she treats and the feelings of anguish and helplessness that is brought on by witnessing firsthand the plight of the fleeing Syrian refugees. She also describes the efforts and motivations of social workers and volunteers who flock the area to aid the refugees with a bit of satire and humor. Interwoven with the stories of the camp (s) is Mina's own story. Mina ,born Ayman, is a trans woman , disowned by her own family, happily married to Francine and settled in the United States. She has not visited Lebanon in forty years . Mazen is the only family member who has kept in touch with her .
The novel is broken into small chapters and flits between Mina's own story and those of the refugees. Never does the author come across as too political or preachy while drawing upon real life incidents that have gained worldwide attention and very tactfully shows the human angle associated with events happening in that part of the world from the perspectives of the refugees - old and young , volunteers and social workers. He also explores the inner conflict of refugees who leave their home country and assimilate with their adopted country hoping that such assimilation would truly provide a new lease of life only to find that often that might not be the case. The author's reference to Greek mythology in parts of this book makes for a rich reading experience.
Given the subject matter I expected this book to be hard to take in . But with beautiful prose and a respectful, delicate approach to the sensitive issues broached in this exquisite novel the brilliance of Rabih Alameddine’s masterful storytelling shines through. The Hakawati was the first Rabih Alameddine novel that I read and absolutely fell in love with. The Wrong End of the Telescope is my fifth book by Rabih Alameddine and I truly look forward to reading more of his work!
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srms.reads | 7 other reviews | Sep 4, 2023 |

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Works
13
Also by
6
Members
2,823
Popularity
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Rating
3.9
Reviews
142
ISBNs
110
Languages
15
Favorited
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