
Abundance from the Desert: Classical Arabic Poetry
Kay Hardy Campbell
Raymond Farrin
2011, Syracuse UP, 978-0-81563-222-1, $24.95 hb.
In recent centuries, some literary critics have denounced classical Arabic poetry as monotonous and lacking in structural cohesiveness. In this book, Raymond Farrin brilliantly disproves such claims. He presents 13 of the greatest poets and genres of classical Arabic poetry from 500 to 1250 ce. The author introduces each major poetic genre and the life of the poet being featured, putting the verses into context. After presenting each poem, he charts its structure, demonstrating that each poem has a center, with symmetry at the beginning and end. Arab history unfolds before the reader as he or she moves through the poems. This book requires no background in Arabic, and it will give both general readers and specialists a deeper appreciation of the Arabs’ enormous poetic legacy.
You may also be interested in...

Historic Mosques in Sub-Saharan Africa
From Mali to Tanzania, historian Stéphane Pradines traces a thousand years of Islamic architecture that forces us to rethink what we know about Africa’s past.
A History of Mali’s National Drink Traces Green Tea—Book Review
By tracing ritual instead of commerce, anthropologist Ute Röschenthaler shows that the story of tea in West Africa involves multidirectional routes and local agency.