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Origins: A Memoir

Origins: A Memoir
By Amin Maalouf

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Product Description

Origins, by the world-renowned writer Amin Maalouf, is a sprawling, hemisphere-spanning, intergenerational saga. Set during the last quarter of the nineteenth century and the first quarter of the twentieth—in the mountains of Lebanon and in Havana, Cuba—Origins recounts the family history of the generation of Maalouf’s paternal grandfather, Boutros Maalouf.
 
Maalouf sets out to discover the truth about why Boutros, a poet and educator in Lebanon, traveled across the globe to rescue his younger brother, Gabrayel, who had settled in Havana. What follows is the gripping excavation of a family’s hidden past. Maalouf is an energetic and amiable narrator, illuminating the more obscure corners of late Ottoman nationalism, the psychology of Lebanese sectarianism, and the dynamics of family quarrels. He moves with great agility across time and space, and across genres of writing. But he never loses track of his story’s central thread: his quest to lift the shadow of legend from his family’s past.
 
Origins is at once a gripping family chronicle and a timely consideration of Lebanese culture and politics.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #312284 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-05-13
  • Released on: 2008-05-13
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 416 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
In this sensitive if mildly overwritten memoir of long-held secrets, betrayal and denial, Maalouf, who won the 1993 Prix Goncourt for Rock of Tanios, traces his familial history from a tiny mountainside village in Lebanon to Cuba and back. Presented, upon the death of his father, with a trunkful of documents, Maalouf sifts through the detritus of letters, journals and diary entries in search of information on his great uncle Gebrayel, whose life is swathed in family legends. At eighteen, he simply boarded a ship leaving for America, Maalouf writes of Gebrayel, but after a three-year sojourn in New York City, he emigrated to Cuba. Maalouf pieces together Gebrayel's Cuban life, quoting extensively from his letters. The author also exerts much literary effort conjuring up the internal machinations of a family torn asunder by societal changes, the internecine clash of local religious beliefs and growing family enmity toward their wayward uncle. In the end, Maalouf travels to Cuba and, with the help of a plucky distant relative, finds the location of Gebrayel's house. For all his personal struggles, Maalouf never really manages to lift this book from mere family recollection to any larger cultural insight. (June)
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From Booklist
Maalouf is a Lebanese-born journalist who moved to Paris in 1975 to escape the ravages of the civil war in his homeland. In this riveting and intriguing memoir, he describes himself and his family as a rather nomadic clan, without deep emotional ties to place or religious affiliation. When his father died, Maalouf was given the task of informing his grandmother. As a result, he came into possession of several letters from a great uncle, Gabrayel, who had immigrated to Cuba and died there early in the twentieth century. His brother, Boutros (Maalouf’s grandfather) had traveled to Cuba to rescue him from some dire circumstances, and Maalouf’s investigation of that mission forms the core of his narrative. The result is an excellent family saga that also works as a mystery and even as a discourse on the political culture of Lebanon. Maalouf is a gifted writer; he has a knack for maintaining dramatic tension as he reveals his efforts to uncover his family’s secrets, layer by layer, as his search extends over three continents. This is an intensely personal and compelling story. --Jay Freeman

Review
"Now, just when it looked as if more or less everyone, politicians included, was close to getting the Sunni-Shiite thing down, along comes Amin Maalouf with his lovely, complex memoir, 'Origins,' to remind us that Arab identity is as fluid, unsettled and ever-changing as the Mediterranean Sea where it kisses the shores of Lebanon, his country of origin, and France, where he has lived for the last 30 years...Yet in the end, Maalouf doesn't only want to illuminate family history or amplify stories barely whispered for a hundred years; instead, he strives to reveal the fecund variety of his own family, of Arab life and history, of history itself. In doing so, he offers a lesson in the value of impermanence and shifting sands...He is one of that small handful of writers, like David Grossman and Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who are indispensable to us in our current crisis." -- The New York Times Book Review


Customer Reviews

What about me!4
Tasteful choice of words, clear, and great order of events. Very smooth. All these great things however, are in the background. The biggest impression on me, was how he describes the mentality of many of us, in a different time and setting. Some of us live, by taking what we need from grandma and grandma, mom and dad, and ready to go "out" to the world. Amin found that there is also a world "in". by "in" I mean, he decided to spend his days getting to know his family members, vice, getting to know friends, teachers, and others. Through his journey of investigation we learn about his family's culture, draw our own conclusions about his family members, and become interested in the found evidence.

The Tree5
Amin Maalouf's biographical narrative on the history of his family reads like one of his many well-written books. Maalouf's books, with no exception, can not only transport you back in time, but also acclimatise you to foreign lands in which you have never set foot. Such is the effect of his writing that I can easily conjure up vivid images of an Ottoman Lebanese village from the late nineteenth century.

Maalouf's interest in his own origins, and its impact on his writings is made known when he reveals in one of the chapters how a story of a cousin who goes on a hunger-strike to challenge the family's objection to his studying has inspired the struggle through which the main character had to pass in his book, The Rock of Tanios.

The Maaloufs may have led a very ordinary life, but the presentation of their lives and the branching out that had subsequently occurred within the family, allowing it to stretch throughout various continents is what makes it an extraordinary story. Moreover, the author's personal journey, both emotional and physical, to trace the lives of great-uncles and great-grandfathers relying solely on surviving correspondences that were saved by family gives the narrative an intense edge, transforming it into a scintillating cinematic spectacle in the mind's eye of the reader. The book, unfortunately, ends too soon before the reader's curiosity is satiated. We are made aware that the author's primary source to the earlier generation was his father, but there is little said about Rushdi, whose name is mentioned only once in the book. Will the author follow this one with a sequel? I do hope so.

Origins is very original and enjoyable. I suddenly feel a strong and intimate belonging to the village of Machrah. Lebanon is the land of mythical real-life stories and brilliant story-tellers.

Origins5
This is a fascinating personal history of a Lebanese family and its emigration to various countries and continents in the world. The Maalouf family's story parallels so many other families in the world that experience a kind of diaspora caused by hardships of one kind or another: economic issues, family conflicts and war. The story of the author's search for information backed up with his own travels to various sites including the USA and Cuba is another fascinating backdrop to the memoir. He is able to connect his family to Maaloufs living in Utah and Texas today. Anyone who enjoys learning about history through personal memoirs will appreciate this book.