Mohammed Hasan Alwan


Mohammed Hasan Alwan is a Saudi Arabian novelist and the Chief Executive Officer of the Literature, Publishing, and Translation Commission affiliated with the Ministry of Culture in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, appointed in 2020. He was born in Riyadh and studied Computer Information Systems at King Saud University, obtaining a bachelor's degree in 2002. He also obtained an MBA from the University of Portland, Oregon in 2008 and Ph.D from Carleton University, Ottawa in 2016.
Alwan is the third Saudi novelist to win the International Prize for Arabic Fiction in 2017, following novelists Abdo Khal in 2010 and Raja'a Alem in 2011.
Alwan has published five novels to date: Saqf Elkefaya, Sophia, Touq Altahara, "Al-Qundus", and "Mouton Sageer". His work has appeared in translation in Banipal magazine ; in The Guardian ; and in Words Without Borders.
His work was published in the Beirut39 anthology and in the IPAF Nadwa anthology.

Awards and honors

In 2009-10, Alwan was chosen as one of the 39 best Arab authors under the age of 40 by the Beirut39 project. He was also a participant in the first IPAF Nadwa in 2009.
In 2013, his novel, Al-Qundus, was shortlisted in the International Prize for Arabic Fiction. In 2015, Alwan won the Arab World Institute's Prix de la Littérature Arabe for Al-Qundus, translated to French by Stéphanie Dujols as Le castor. It was considered the best novel to be translated into French in 2015. In 2017, he won the International Prize for Arabic Fiction for A Small Death, a novel about Ibn Arabi.