Ismail Fahd Ismail


Ismail Fahd Ismail or Ismāʿīl Fahd Ismāʿīl was an Iraqi-Kuwaiti novelist, short story writer, and literary critic.
Acclaimed as one of the most significant and prolific writers in the history of Kuwait, he authored over twenty novels, numerous short story collections, and critical publications..
Two of his works were shortlisted for the prestigious International Prize for Arabic Fiction:
  • Fī ḥaḍrat al-̔ anqā’ wa al-ḫil al-ūfī in 2014 - This novel tells the story of Ibn Abihi, a bedoon in Kuwaiti society. It is narrated in the first person as Ibn Abihi's autobiography following his release from prison, addressed to his daughter Zeinab, whom he never met.
  • Al-Sabiliat in 2017 - This novel is a narrative centered on his own birth village in Iraq against the backdrop of the devastating Iran-Iraq War in the 1980s. The book was translated by Sophia Vasalou and published posthumously in the USA under the title The Old Woman and the River.

    Biography

Ismail Fahd Ismail was born in 1940 in the small village of Al-Sabiliat, near Basra in Iraq, where he spent his childhood and early years. In the 1950s, he began working as a teacher in Basra.
The late 1950s and 1960s in Iraq were marked by extreme political instability, characterized by violent coups d'état and severe political repression as Arab nationalists and the Ba'ath Party vied for power. This volatile environment directly led to Ismail Fahd Ismail's imprisonment and eventual flight to Kuwait in 1967.
After settling in Kuwait, he graduated in 1976 from the Higher Institute of Dramatic Arts with a degree in Drama and Literary Criticism. He worked in the Kuwaiti public administration at the Ministry of Education until the early 1980s, when he retired to establish his own small literary business.
He died at the age of 78 in Kuwait City on September 25, 2018, and was buried in the Sulaibikhat Cemetery.

Literary Style and Themes

Ismail Fahd Ismail is considered one of the pioneers of the novel genre in Kuwaiti literature, alongside contemporaries like Laila al-Othman and Farhan Rashid Al-Farhan. At that time the Kuwait had little or no literary production, being one of the arabic countries where the Nahda came with some delay if compared to the neighbours.
Some scholars compare his narrative depth and style to those of Egyptian literary giants Naguib Mahfouz and Tawfiq al-Hakim. He himself admitted to a strong influence from Dostoevsky, specifically citing The Brothers Karamazov. His work also served as an inspiration for a younger generation of Kuwaiti writers, such as Taleb Alrefai.
His literary style often incorporates elements of his first love, cinema, as he mentioned in interviews. His novels were the result of extensive research, embedding the linguistic characteristics of the people and places he described, and drawing on historical events and individuals he encountered. He was also the founder and leader of the literary circle, the Multaqa al-thulatha, held in his Kuwait City office.
The themes in Ismail Fahd's literary production show an interest for the political situation in the Arab world, with first phase focused more on the Iraqi history and politics and a second more focused on Kuwait and Middle East in general:
  • Early Phase : His initial works reflected the trauma and political turmoil of his native Iraq. The 1965 novel, Al-Habl, is a key example, reflecting his experiences in the 1950s and 60s. This vein is also present in his poetry; his 1961 poem, Al-Hadara, was openly critical of Iraqi leader Abdul-Karim Qasim's attempt to annex Kuwait in 1961. Other early works include The Sky was Blue and Light Swamps.
  • Later Phase : His later production moved closer to Kuwaiti social history and broader Arab political concerns. The 1976 novel, Al-Sheiah, addresses events of the Lebanese Civil War and the Palestinian Question, a topic revisited in Ala Uhdat Hanthala, a biographical novel about his friend, the Palestinian cartoonist Naji al-Ali assassinated in London in 1987.

    Selected Works

Ismail Fahd Ismail published almost thirty different novels in this activity period. Among them:
  • The Rope
  • The Sky was blue
  • Light swamps
  • Other river banks
  • Cages and Common Language
  • File of Incident 67
  • Circles of Impossibility
  • Al-Sheiah
  • The Birds and Friends
  • A Step in the Dream
  • The Nile Flows North – The Beginnings, Part 1
  • The Nile Flows North – The Watchmen, Part 2
  • The Nile Flows North – The Taste and the Smell, Part 3
  • The Phoenix and the faithful friend
  • * Translated in English:

    Plays

  • The Text
  • ''For the event, the rest of Ibn Zaydun''

    Studies

  • The Arab Story in Kuwait
  • ''The Verb in the Theater of Saadallah Wannous''