Every Book Recommendation in Rabih Alameddine's An Unnecessary Woman

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Have you ever met someone you identified with so much, and were so enthralled by, that you had complete confidence in their taste in books? For me, that person is Aaliya Saleh, the narrator of Rabih Alameddine’s magnificent novel An Unnecessary Woman. The book is brimming with references to other writing, and from the first few pages, I found myself wanting to write them down.

As the novel continues, she includes essays, poems, artworks, and even pieces of music, as well as work she despises. It’s tempting to go into how books within a book, people and works she found in things she read and is passing on to the reader — how these references buried within references — play into the books’ themes, with Aaliya’s Beirut layered onto the Beiruts of a million other people and a million other pasts, but I’ll spare you any more of that.

Instead, here’s a list of recommendations from Aaliya/Alameddine, in order, with their favorites highlighted.

(I hope you don’t mind that I included affiliate links; this took a while to put together.)

There are also a number of authors mentioned without reference to a particular book:

  • Bilge Karasu

  • Czesław Miłosz

  • Novalis

  • Marguerite Duras

  • Alice Munro

  • William Faulkner

  • Primo Levi

  • Sławomir Mrożek

  • C. P. Cavafy

  • Cesare Pavese

  • Edna O'Brien

  • Colm Tóibín

  • Anne Enright

  • Junot Díaz

  • Aleksandar Hemon

  • Nadine Gordimer

  • Nuruddin Farah

  • Patrick White

  • David Malouf

  • Milan Kundera

  • Ismail Kadare (I personally recommend The Pyramid)

  • Nikolay Gogol

  • Julio Cortázar

  • Sadegh Hedayat

  • Jorge Luis Borges

  • Cees Nooteboom


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Emily Winsauer