Mikhāʾīl Naʿīmah
Mikhāʾīl Naʿīmah (born Nov. 22, 1889, Biskintā, Lebanon—died Feb. 28, 1988, Beirut) was a Lebanese literary critic, playwright, essayist, and short-story writer who helped introduce modern realism into Arabic prose fiction.
Naʿīmah was educated at schools in Lebanon, Palestine, Russia, and the United States. After graduating in law from Washington State University in the United States, he settled in New York City and worked as a journalist and critic for Arabic-language publications there. In New York he formed a close friendship with another Arab writer, Khalil Gibran. In 1932 he returned to Lebanon a highly celebrated author and settled in his native village.
In his short stories Naʿīmah depicted the problems of Lebanese society more realistically and with greater technical sophistication than had preceding Arabic writers. His collections of short stories include al-Marāhil (1933; “The Stages”), Kana ma kāna (1937; “Once upon a Time”), and al-Bayādir (1945; “The Threshing Floors”). His other outstanding books are a highly subjective biography of Gibran (1934) and his autobiography, Sabʿūn, 3 vol. (1959–60; “Seventy”).