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Omar El Akkad
Omar El Akkad (Arabic: عمر العقاد, romanized: ʿUmar al-ʿAqqād; born 1982) is an Egyptian-Canadian novelist and journalist, whose novel What Strange Paradise was the winner of the 2021 Giller Prize.
Omar El Akkad was born in Cairo, Egypt, and grew up in Doha, Qatar. He attended an American international school in Egypt. When he was 16 years old, he moved to Canada with his family, completing high school in Montreal and university at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario. He has a computer science degree.
For ten years, he was a staff reporter for The Globe and Mail, where he covered the war in Afghanistan, military trials at Guantanamo Bay and the Arab Spring in Egypt. He was most recently a correspondent for the western United States, where he covered Black Lives Matter.
His first novel, American War, was published in 2017. It received positive reviews from critics; The New York Times book critic Michiko Kakutani compared it favourably to Cormac McCarthy's The Road and Philip Roth's novel The Plot Against America. She wrote that "melodramatic" dialogue could be forgiven by the use of details that makes the fictional future "seem alarmingly real". The Globe and Mail called it "a masterful debut". The novel was named a shortlisted finalist for the 2017 Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize, and for the 2018 amazon.ca First Novel Award, and won a Kobo Emerging Writer Prize.
In November 2019 BBC News listed American War on a list of the 100 most influential novels.
In 2021, El Akkad appeared on the podcast Storybound.
On November 8, 2021, El Akkad won the Giller Prize for What Strange Paradise. The novel was selected for the 2022 edition of Canada Reads. It was defended by Tareq Hadhad. The book follows migration and what is at the core of the global crisis. It follows Amir, a Syrian boy who is the only survivor of a migrant boat sinking.
He has also written the foreword to Yasmine Seale's The Annotated Arabian Nights: Tales from 1001 Nights, the most recent English translation of the classic Middle Eastern story collection (and the only complete English translation from the original text done by a woman).
Omar El Akkad
Omar El Akkad (Arabic: عمر العقاد, romanized: ʿUmar al-ʿAqqād; born 1982) is an Egyptian-Canadian novelist and journalist, whose novel What Strange Paradise was the winner of the 2021 Giller Prize.
Omar El Akkad was born in Cairo, Egypt, and grew up in Doha, Qatar. He attended an American international school in Egypt. When he was 16 years old, he moved to Canada with his family, completing high school in Montreal and university at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario. He has a computer science degree.
For ten years, he was a staff reporter for The Globe and Mail, where he covered the war in Afghanistan, military trials at Guantanamo Bay and the Arab Spring in Egypt. He was most recently a correspondent for the western United States, where he covered Black Lives Matter.
His first novel, American War, was published in 2017. It received positive reviews from critics; The New York Times book critic Michiko Kakutani compared it favourably to Cormac McCarthy's The Road and Philip Roth's novel The Plot Against America. She wrote that "melodramatic" dialogue could be forgiven by the use of details that makes the fictional future "seem alarmingly real". The Globe and Mail called it "a masterful debut". The novel was named a shortlisted finalist for the 2017 Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize, and for the 2018 amazon.ca First Novel Award, and won a Kobo Emerging Writer Prize.
In November 2019 BBC News listed American War on a list of the 100 most influential novels.
In 2021, El Akkad appeared on the podcast Storybound.
On November 8, 2021, El Akkad won the Giller Prize for What Strange Paradise. The novel was selected for the 2022 edition of Canada Reads. It was defended by Tareq Hadhad. The book follows migration and what is at the core of the global crisis. It follows Amir, a Syrian boy who is the only survivor of a migrant boat sinking.
He has also written the foreword to Yasmine Seale's The Annotated Arabian Nights: Tales from 1001 Nights, the most recent English translation of the classic Middle Eastern story collection (and the only complete English translation from the original text done by a woman).