The True True Story of Raja the Gullible by Rabih AlameddineMy rating: 4 of 5 stars
I hadn't realized that this book was a National Book Award winner, but I did find it on a staff pick display at the Beaverton Library, and it interested me enough that I picked it up and checked it out. Playing like a Lebanese version of Less and Tales of the City, Raja's story is wickedly funny, but also wickedly tragic as he has to contend with not only family drama, but the horrors that have befallen Beirut throughout his lifetime. Told in anachronic order, the book relates Raja's experiences with the collapse of the Lebanese economy, Covid, the port explosion, invasions, and - in the most detail - the Lebanese civil war, the ramifications of which for Raja prove to be the most far reaching when he finally gets a chance to come to America for a prestigious workshop. It's a book that when you read it, you'll never forget it, especially if you also get the chance to read it during Pride Month.
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