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A Man of Letters

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Taha Hussein (1889-1973), blind from early childhood, rose from humble beginnings to pursue a distinguished career in Egyptian public life (he was at one time Minister of Education). But he was most influential through his voluminous, varied, and controversial writings.
He became known by the unofficial title 'Dean of Arabic Letters,' and the distinguished Egyptian critic Louis Awad described him as "the greatest single intellectual and cultural influence on the literature of his period."
Based on the true story of a friend of the author, this novel--unfolding between Cairo and Paris and through vivid personal correspondence--draws a picture of a powerful friendship and of a young man's the man of letters of the title finds himself split between--and in love with--two cultures essentially incompatible, East and West. In his desperate struggle to reconcile them his soul is estranged and he is thrown--or escapes--deeper into the backstreet abyss of First World War Paris. In the end it is perhaps the very impracticality of his own morality that destroys him.

144 pages, Hardcover

Published June 15, 1994

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Taha Hussein

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Taha Hussein (Arabic: طه حسين) was among the most influential 20th-century Egyptian writers and intellectuals, and a leading figure of the Arab Renaissance and the modernist movement in the Arab world. His sobriquet was "The Dean of Arabic Literature" (Arabic: عميد الأدب العربي). He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature twenty-one times.

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