Rabih Alameddine (Arabic: ربيع علم الدين; born 1959) is an American painter and writer.[1] His 2021 novel The Wrong End of the Telescope won the 2022 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction.[2]
Alameddine was born in Amman, Jordan to Lebanese Druze[3] parents (Alameddine himself is an atheist).[4] He grew up in Kuwait and Lebanon, which he left at age 17 to live first in England and then in California. He earned a degree in engineering from the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) and a Master of Business in San Francisco. Alameddine is gay.[5]
Alameddine began his career as an engineer, then moved to writing and painting. His debut novel Koolaids, which touched on both the AIDS epidemic in San Francisco and the Lebanese Civil War, was published in 1998 by Picador.[6] The author of six novels and a collection of short stories, Alameddine was the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2002.[7] He has lived in San Francisco and Beirut and currently teaches at the University of Virginia's creative writing program.[8][9]
In 2014, Alameddine was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award and he won the California Book Awards Gold Medal Fiction for An Unnecessary Woman.[10][11] Alameddine is best known for this novel, which tells the story of Aaliya, a Lebanese woman and translator living in war-torn Lebanon. The novel "manifests traumatic signposts of the [Lebanese] civil war, which make it indelibly situational, and accordingly latches onto complex psychological issues."[12]
^Waïl S. Hassan, "Queering Orientalism," Chapter 9 of Immigrant Narratives: Orientalism and Cultural Translation in Arab American and Arab British Literature. Oxford University Press, 2011. Pp. 199-219.