Book Review: The Hakawati by Rabih Alameddine
Published April 22, 2008
While recounting the history, and the rise in fortunes of the al-Kharrat family through the eyes and memory of their prodigal son, Osama, on his returning to Beirut from Los Angeles for the death of his father, Alameddine regales us with the stories that entranced his characters when they were children. While most of us are probably familiar with the story of Abraham and Isaac, (although judging by the way the world acts today it seems like most of us have also forgotten that each of the Big Three: Christian, Jew, and Muslim recognize them) I doubt many of us know anything about Ishmael, father of the Arab tribes, the true story of Fatima who was lover to a djinn, or Baybars the slave prince who vanquished the Crusaders once and for all.
Of course, every history has to start somewhere, and with the al-Kharrat family, at least on the father's side, it started with Osama's grandfather. As the illegitimate son of an English missionary doctor and his Armenian maid, he is the Hakawati of the title. At the age of twelve he had to flee the city of Urfa in Turkey where he was born, when, for his part in pigeon war, his life was threatened. His mother had died two weeks after he was born, and the doctor's maids who raised him sent him to Beirut where one of them had a cousin.
At least this is the story that Osama tells us his grandfather told him when he was young. Osama is our Hakawati, regaling us with his memories of his father, mother, sister, aunts, uncles, cousins, friends, and enemies. Stories that he was told by his grandfather, his uncles, and other members of his family of the history of the Arab world make up a goodly portion of his memories. Within those stories, other stories live, and as the book unfolds, all the stories take on lives of their own.
As a result, in the course of telling us the history of his family, Osama is also telling us the history of the Arab world. Each history starts with the tale of the founder, and parallels the other for the rest of the book. Through war and peace in Lebanon, and the stories of Arab heroes fighting to preserve their freedom in the face of treachery, we learn both the modern legend of the al-Kharrat family and the ancient myths, as the heroes of each tale give birth, survive warfare, and travel the world.
- Book Review: The Hakawati by Rabih Alameddine
- Published: April 22, 2008
- Type: Review
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Books: Families, Books: Fantasy, Books: History, Books: Literature and Fiction, Review
- Writer: Richard Marcus
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Richard Marcus is a long-haired Canadian iconoclast who writes reviews and opines on the world as he sees it at 






