Richard Derus's Reviews > An Unnecessary Woman

An Unnecessary Woman by Rabih Alameddine
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really liked it
bookshelves: gifted, gone

Real Rating: 4.25* of five

The Publisher Says: One of Beirut’s most celebrated voices, Rabih Alameddine follows his international bestseller, The Hakawati, with a heartrending novel that celebrates the singular life of an obsessive introvert, revealing Beirut’s beauties and horrors along the way.

Aaliya Sohbi lives alone in her Beirut apartment, surrounded by stockpiles of books. Godless, fatherless, divorced, and childless, Aaliya is her family’s "unnecessary appendage.” Every year, she translates a new favorite book into Arabic, then stows it away. The thirty-seven books that Aaliya has translated have never been read—by anyone. After overhearing her neighbors, "the three witches,” discussing her too-white hair, Aaliya accidentally dyes her hair too blue.

In this breathtaking portrait of a reclusive woman’s late-life crisis, readers follow Aaliya’s digressive mind as it ricochets across visions of past and present Beirut. Insightful musings on literature, philosophy, and art are invaded by memories of the Lebanese Civil War and Aaliya’s volatile past. As she tries to overcome her aging body and spontaneous emotional upwellings, Aaliya is faced with an unthinkable disaster that threatens to shatter the little life she has left.

A love letter to literature and its power to define who we are, the gifted Rabih Alameddine has given us a nuanced rendering of a single woman's reclusive life in the Middle East.

My Review: The Doubleday UK meme, a book a day for July 2014, is the goad I'm using to get through my snit-based unwritten reviews. Today's prompt is to discuss your favorite novel in translation. So far this year, this is my hands-down favorite novel translated from the furrin. **CORRECTION** The novel was written in English, but it's so beautiful I don't want to take it down!


What does it mean to be invisible? If you choose not to interact with the world, become a recluse, divest yourself of close relationships and divorce yourself from the life of the boudoir, and seal yourself away in a capsule formed of books and words, you are a freak. Aaliya's neighbors think she's a ruined woman. Aaliya's customers at the bookstore she works at, intellectuals all, don't notice her enough to form an opinion, and her family (absent the dearest companion of her life, her *true* family, a departed friend) hasn't given her much attention at all.

She lives in Beirut, that once-fabulous once-gorgeous ruin on the Mediterranean, an early victim of the endless idiotic religious wars of the region. Aaliya represents Beirut's decline from a world-class cultural center to a shuttered mass of broken buildings holding wary, angry people.

Aaliya is an angry woman, or at least I see her as such, and has walled herself in to avoid the nasty consequences of being angry amid armed and angry men. She would not be isolated if Beirut wasn't what it is, I think, because she is a reflection of the energy of that wounded and dying place. She preserves her sanity by translating her beloved books, the beauties of which she renders into the sinuous sonorous rhythms of Arabic. And then, like she does with her self, she packages them up and puts them away. They are safe. They are invisible.

This is tragic. This is a sin. A woman, a mere woman, cannot be her full self; a book, a useless object, cannot spread its beauties for fear that it will not be appreciated or will be used as a weapon by the religious idiots.

And this is the reason I give this book over four stars. Alameddine has created a literary person's most deeply felt example of why the world appears to be headed directly for the bottom of the septic tank: Aaliya reads and thinks on and renders the majesty and magic of words into the language of her people, and then cannot, will not, dare not allow them out of her keeping.

This book should have made me feel claustrophobic. It appears to be a scream from within the coffin that anti-intellectual religious idiots are all but nailing shut around the world. (Creation SCIENCE?! REALLY?!) Instead I felt...uplifted in a curious way, heartened, encouraged. Alameddine sees it too! He created this most marginal of marginal beings, the unmarried childless woman intellectual in an Islamic society, and set her to singing. Aaliya sings her thoughts, sings her translations, warbles her precious quotes to herself, her best and only audience. She makes beauty from beauty as she sits and rots in the cesspool of gawd.

I don't know if this is a cautionary tale, an elegy, or the quietest jeremiad of all time. I do know that I can't, and don't wish to, forget Aaliya.
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Quotes Richard Liked

Rabih Alameddine
“Is life less thrilling if your neighbors are rational, if they don’t bomb your power stations whenever they feel you need to be admonished? Is it less rousing if they don’t rattle your windows and nerves with indiscriminate sonic booms just because they can?”
Rabih Alameddine, An Unnecessary Woman

Rabih Alameddine
“I long ago abandoned myself to a blind lust for the written word. Literature is my sandbox. In it I play, build my forts and castles, spend glorious time.”
Rabih Alameddine, An Unnecessary Woman

Rabih Alameddine
“Beirut is the Elizabeth Taylor of cities: insane, beautiful, falling apart, aging, and forever drama laden.She'll also marry any infatuated suitor who promises to make her life more comfortable, no matter how inappropriate he is.”
Rabih Alameddine, An Unnecessary Woman

Rabih Alameddine
“No loss is felt more keenly than the loss of what might have been. No nostalgia hurts as much as nostalgia for things that never existed.”
Rabih Alameddine, An Unnecessary Woman

Rabih Alameddine
“When I read a book, I try my best, not always successfully, to let the wall crumble just a bit, the barricade that separates me from the book. I try to be involved.
I am Raskalnikov. I am K. I am Humbert and Lolita.
I am you.
If you read these pages and think I'm the way I am because I lived through a civil war, you can't feel my pain. If you believe you're not like me because one woman, and only one, Hannah, chose to be my friend, then you're unable to empathize.”
Rabih Alameddine, An Unnecessary Woman

Rabih Alameddine
“I know. You think you love art because you have a sensitive soul.

Isn't a sensitive soul simply a means of transforming a deficiency into proud disdain?

You think art has meaning. You think you're not like me.”
Rabih Alameddine, An Unnecessary Woman

Rabih Alameddine
“Now, please don't tell me you don't care about how you look and that there's more to you than your appearance. There are two kinds of people in this world : people who want to be desired, and people who want to be desired so much that they pretend they don't.”
Rabih Alameddine, An Unnecessary Woman

Rabih Alameddine
“One's first response is that these Beirutis must be savagely insane to murder each other for such trivial divergences. Don't judge us too harshly. At the heart of most antagonisms are irreconcilable similarities. Hundred-year wars were fought over whether Jesus was human in divine form or divine in human form. Belief is murderous.”
Rabih Alameddine, An Unnecessary Woman

Rabih Alameddine
“I thought every person should live for art, not just me, and furthermore, why would I want to be normal? Why would I want to be stupid like everyone else?”
Rabih Alameddine, An Unnecessary Woman

Rabih Alameddine
“Memory chooses to preserve what desire cannot hope to sustain.”
Rabih Alameddine, An Unnecessary Woman

Rabih Alameddine
“Sex, like art, can unsettle a soul, can grind a heart in a mortar. Sex, like literature, can sneak the other within one's wall, even if for only a moment, a moment before one immures oneself again.”
Rabih Alameddine, An Unnecessary Woman

Rabih Alameddine
“Causation extraction makes Jack a dull reader.”
Rabih Alameddine, An Unnecessary Woman

Rabih Alameddine
“I slipped into art to escape life. I sneaked off into literature.”
Rabih Alameddine, An Unnecessary Woman

Rabih Alameddine
“In every evocation of a childhood scene, my stepfather's face is the least detailed, the most out of focus; when I think of him my memory's eyes have cataracts.”
Rabih Alameddine, An Unnecessary Woman

Rabih Alameddine
“He may be my half brother, but we're not related. A chasm of incommunicable worlds lies between us.”
Rabih Alameddine, An Unnecessary Woman

Rabih Alameddine
“We rarely consider that we're also formed by the decisions we didn't make, by events that could have happened but didn't, or by our lack of choices, for that matter.”
Rabih Alameddine, An Unnecessary Woman


Reading Progress

Started Reading
February 24, 2014 – Finished Reading
July 3, 2014 – Shelved
October 10, 2020 – Shelved as: gifted
July 1, 2024 – Shelved as: gone

Comments Showing 1-27 of 27 (27 new)

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Garima Wonderful review, Richard.


Sophia I agree with Garima and I felt the same when I read it.


Richard Derus Garima wrote: "Wonderful review, Richard."

Sophia B wrote: "I agree with Garima and I felt the same when I read it."

Thank you both so much for saying so. It was a deeply moving read for me on so many levels.


message 4: by Sue (new) - added it

Sue Smith Wonderful, wonderful review Richard. I sooooo get it.


message 5: by Samadrita (new) - added it

Samadrita Beautiful, beautiful review. Can't wait to read it now.


Richard Derus Sue wrote: "Wonderful, wonderful review Richard. I sooooo get it."

Samadrita wrote: "Beautiful, beautiful review. Can't wait to read it now."

Garshk, y'all, the praise is lovely but above the merits of the review isn't it? Thank you, thank you anyway, it is lovely to hear.


message 7: by Kristin (KC) (new)

Kristin (KC) I think the praise is well-deserved. Other than reviews, do you write, Richard? Books, poetry, recipes--anything?? Wow, this review is BEAUTIFUL.


Richard Derus Kristin (KC) wrote: "I think the praise is well-deserved. Other than reviews, do you write, Richard? Books, poetry, recipes--anything?? Wow, this review is BEAUTIFUL."

You're too kind! I am hoping to unleash a gay Gaslight-era detective story with a Tarot-card paranormal twist here comin' up.


message 9: by Saleem (new)

Saleem Khashan love your commitment to excellence in reviews. I read Arabic and English and this guy has no importance in Arab literature. maybe it's the gay thing causing prejudice against him?


Richard Derus Saleem wrote: "love your commitment to excellence in reviews. I read Arabic and English and this guy has no importance in Arab literature. maybe it's the gay thing causing prejudice against him?"

Thanks for the compliment, Saleem! Nice to see you around and about.

I'd imagine his position in Arabic culture is defined by the gay thing, knowing what little I know of the culture. It's a profoundly different thing to be gay in the Arab world than it is in the West, for sure.

I think the source of much discomfort around most Westerners reading Arabic translated literature is that the transgressions of cultural conventions...an unmarried childless woman living alone and being an intellectual...don't seem shocking to us, and are fairly uninteresting in and of themselves. Aaliya is interesting to an American reader because she is so clearly a lone voice, a last-ditch crusader against the fall of night, or at least that's what I think it is.

This is a beautiful book as translated. Have you read it in Arabic? Is it as beautiful and lyrical in the original?


reading is my hustle richard- is The Woman Upstairs at all on your radar? timing is everything and I read An Unnecessary Woman too soon after (and so) I was unable to appreciate this one. in many ways they are the same book. I would be curious to know if you thought the same.


Richard Derus Elizabeth wrote: "richard- is The Woman Upstairs at all on your radar? timing is everything and I read An Unnecessary Woman too soon after (and so) I was unable to appreciate this one..."

I wasn't impressed by the Messud book, I'm afraid. Read it around xmas and was impatient to be done with it. It seemed to me to circle back and back and back to the insults of her "nearest and dearest" those feckless thoughtless cretins.

And that, I think, is the difference for me: Those people that Nora returns to in her mind are less interesting to me than the books and writers that Aaliya cocoons herself with.


message 13: by reading is my hustle (last edited Jul 06, 2014 07:20AM) (new) - rated it 2 stars

reading is my hustle Richard Reviles Censorship wrote: "Elizabeth wrote: "richard- is The Woman Upstairs at all on your radar? timing is everything and I read An Unnecessary Woman too soon after (and so) I was unable to a..."

i think i will have to give this one another go. i am afraid i dismissed it prematurely. see what your reviews do to me? ;)


Richard Derus Elizabeth wrote: "i think i will have to give this one another go. i am afraid i dismissed it prematurely. see what your review do to me? ;)"




Margitte Magnificent review, Richard!!! Impressive!


Richard Derus Margitte wrote: "Magnificent review, Richard!!! Impressive!"

*blush* You're too kind, thank you!


reading is my hustle Richard Reviles Censorship wrote: "Elizabeth wrote: "i think i will have to give this one another go. i am afraid i dismissed it prematurely. see what your review do to me? ;)"

"


snort. LOVE this.


message 18: by Meena (new) - added it

Meena The world is headed for the bottom of a septic tank.
Fantastic review, Richard. Going to read this soon.


Richard Derus Meenakshi wrote: "The world is headed for the bottom of a septic tank.
Fantastic review, Richard. Going to read this soon."


I'll look forward to reading your review!


message 20: by Vivian (new)

Vivian Great review, again. Depressing, but thanks for posting it.


Richard Derus Vivian wrote: "Great review, again. Depressing, but thanks for posting it."

Oh dear, depressing? Not what I was after at all! Well, permaybehaps reading the book will smoothe away the sadness.


message 22: by Vivian (new)

Vivian Realistic, depressing are interchangeable here. IT sounds both lovely and sad, sorta like an Isaac Dinesen novel.


message 23: by Mary Claire (new)

Mary Claire I'm a freak. Very nice review!


Richard Derus Vivian wrote: "Realistic, depressing are interchangeable here. IT sounds both lovely and sad, sorta like an Isaac Dinesen novel."

Interesting comparison. I'll be interested to see if you think so after reading it.

Mary Claire wrote: "I'm a freak. Very nice review!"

Thank you, Mary Claire!


Richard Derus Sabah wrote: "Im stunned. Speechless! Your depth of understanding and empathy with this woman and what she represents is humbling! Outstanding!!!"

Good gracious! High praise indeed. The author is the one who merits the praise, since he drew her in such vivid images.


Margitte Ahhhhh brilliant review, dear Richard. You capture this book perfectly. I cannot leave this book. I don't want to. I think it is because our beloved protagonist is so much in us all.


Richard Derus Margitte wrote: "Ahhhhh brilliant review, dear Richard. You capture this book perfectly. I cannot leave this book. I don't want to. I think it is because our beloved protagonist is so much in us all."

Thank you, Margitte! I appreciate the compliment. I agree, as well, that the bookish soul that would translate a work of literature without any plan to share it is inside every reader. After all, aren't most of us making movies of the books we read inside out heads? We have no intention of bringing them to the screen. Sort of the same thing....


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