Description
Alaa al-Din Ibn al-Nafis lived for eighty years, during which he witnessed a tremendous amount of horrific events and tragic circumstances: the Crusades, the horrific Seventh Crusade against Damietta and northern Egypt, the Mongol invasion and the fall of Baghdad at the hands of Hulagu; the power struggles between the last generation of Ayyubids and the first generation of Mamluk rulers; the Hisn al-Din Tha’lab Revolt; and the fierce clashes between Aqtai, Aybak, Qutuz, Baybars, and Qalawun.
Alaa ibn al-Nafis was close to all of this. He was the personal physician to al-Zahir Baybars and the chief physician of Egypt and the Levant. Despite the turbulent conditions of his time, he never stopped writing on medicine, thought, and the sciences of his time, leaving us thousands of pages. How did Ibn al-Nafis live, and what did he dictate to al-Waraq, who was forty years younger than him and lived forty years after him? This is what this novel tells.
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