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Prophet: The Life and Times of Kahlil Gibran

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A definitive biography of the author of The Prophet traces the life of Kahlil Gibran from his youth in Lebanon and America to his artistic and literary endeavors, the tragedies and conflicts of his life, and his lasting impact on New Age philosophy. 17,500 first printing.

365 pages, Hardcover

First published October 1, 1998

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About the author

Robin Waterfield

113 books718 followers
Robin Anthony Herschel Waterfield is a British classical scholar, translator, editor, and writer of children's fiction.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Todd.
379 reviews37 followers
February 24, 2016
I confess to not being a fan of Kahlil Gibran. As a middle school student I found a dusty copy of The Prophet on my parent’s bookshelf and thought it the silliest book I had ever read (at the advanced age of 13) despite not being an expert in literature. It seemed that the Prophet of Lebanon was trying too hard to seem mystical and wise – long before I had words for such things.

The Prophet felt like a charlatan trying to sound like a biblical sage. Each verse lacked the eloquence of King James English or the stilted English of the Al-Quran translation that my school library had available. Later on my first College English teacher would refer to Gibran’s most famous work as a fine example of Gibran gibberish. That stuck with me and I haven’t been able to give his work a fair shake since.

It was with the intention of being more judicious with the man and his work that I picked up Robin Waterfield’s biography, Prophet: The Life and Times of Kahlil Gibran. I was warned ahead of time that Waterfield was a Gibran enthusiast who has made something of a career translating and studying his work. However, the biography was quite frank and honest about the man himself; a man who was something of an old school cad in his pursuit of the affections of women and his pursuit of money and patronage. Liesl Schillinger, The National Post and The New Yorker, labels Waterfield’s biographical exercise briefly as “pathology” in comparing to other notable Gibran biographies. This is truth to the point. Kahlil Gibran was remarkably gifted at self promotion and the way his devotees perceive him may often be as the result of this skill set rather than any he possessed as a poet or mystic. This Man from Lebanon was a sly and slick salesman.

I’ve come to see Kahlil Gibran as the forerunner of the modern New Age Guru who had the ability to weave pleasant sounding words together that imitates an aesthetic or mystic ambience, but is devoid of real substance one you contemplate what is beneath the surface. Gibran, as a poet, possessed neither the ecstatic eloquence of Rumi nor the bawdy barroom wit of Hafiz. Whether he truly understood the Sufi traditions he played with is hard to tell, but he remained a Maronite Catholic of dubious character which is on evidence in his treatment of Mary Haskell.

Robin Waterfield’s book is a worthy read to all who are interested in Kahlil Griban’s life and work regardless of their position on either. It’s good that readers can have an honest look at a character that is often remembered for being the seer he pretended to be rather than the man he really was.
Profile Image for Haya Naji.
45 reviews18 followers
June 8, 2017
It’s a coincidence that I’m reading the biography of Gibran before reading any of his books. Despite this is an objective investigation for his life, it's still obvious that he was a narcissist, selfish, liar, and his attitudes and behaviour contradict with the morals he writes about. How can someone with this awful personality relate himself to a prophet or Jesus character!!!

140 reviews3 followers
October 22, 2019
Enlightening. (Isn't that ironic?) First half is sluggish re: his personal relationships, but the 'life and times' aspect was interesting re: the Arabic community in the U.S. turn of the 20th century. And the rise of the "prophet/poet/philosopher" image and cult status is interesting to a poet.
Profile Image for نهلة.
17 reviews
March 26, 2022
نجمة واحدة للصور فقط، كتاب سيء.
387 reviews
January 15, 2016
Gibran spiritual philosophy in the Prophet and insight in Jesus, Son of Man, always intrigued me. This novel places the man in his context as a Syrian, as an immigrant, as an artist, and a human. What comes through is a truly talented thinker, a vulnerable and ambitious human being, and many unsung supporters.
Profile Image for Chicki.
4 reviews1 follower
May 18, 2008
LOVE this guy. Though his words are deep, symbolic, it flows nicely and captures the essence of much of what I feel about many different aspects of life that he speaks of.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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