Críticas:
[A] moving and lyrical account of the life of Islam's most sacred personage... Chraibi give[s] the reader direct access to the most intimate stirrings of the soul of a sacred figure... If Chraibi's Muhammed has a message for contemporary readers, it is that the sacred is present everywhere, if we could only hear the desert singing. - Lucy Stone McNeece, The Journal of African Studies "When fiction touches upon the sacred, the novel shifts upon its foundations and sometimes recaptures the beauty of its origins. Driss Chraibi has given us the rare gift of such a book... assuredly one of the most beautiful accounts ever written of... the Prophet Muhammad." - Quatra, revue de l'institut du monde arabe
Reseña del editor:
It is the 26th day of Ramadan in the year 610, and a handsome man named Muhammad is meditating in a cave on Mount Hira. Fear grips him as he tries to sort out the visions and voices washing over him; and terrified that he is possessed, he leaves the cave to return to Mecca. The day that will transform Muhammad's life - and change the world - has begun. That day becomes a fluid intermingling of the ordinary and a dreamlike conviction that something indescribable is about to happen. Finally, his disquiet increasing, invading his sleep and forcing him to leave his wife's side, Muhammad returns to the cave on Mount Hira to give birth to the momentous revelations within him.This finely crafted, poetic novel captures the mystery of religious revelation as it unfolds in all its intensity, providing a unique window on Islam's Prophet. Winner of Morocco's prestigious Grand Prix Atlas in 1996, it was first published in French in 1995 as ""L'homme du Livre"".
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