
Self-Portrait of Ahmed Rassim

This selection of poems and prose by Ahmed Rassim introduces English readers to the leading French-language Egyptian poet of the first half of the twentieth century. Admired by his fellow Alexandrian, Constantine Cavafy, Rassim’s gently melancholic poems blend the antics of French surrealist writing with a highly personalized–one might call it “mock-arabesque”–oriental style. His whimsical prose chronicles his life as a civil servant in Cairo and Alexandria. Introduction by Gabriel Levin.
“The material here ranges from a satirical send-up of Egyptian bureaucracy … to some thoughtful discussion of poetic form…. Tucked in among these oddments … are some fully realized poems, rendered lushly oriental and yet delicate of sensibility in Levin’s ravishing translation…. Rassim is quite a find.”
The Jerusalem Post
This book will be reissued by Wesleyan University Press soon.