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Lebanon : A Country for No One & Everyone. The Human Condition, #2

Par : Nader Soubra
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Disponible dans votre compte client Decitre ou Furet du Nord dès validation de votre commande. Le format ePub est :
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8233393983
  • EAN9798233393983
  • Date de parution16/03/2026
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurLinda Balsamo

Résumé

Lebanon is not a country you understand. It is a country you survive. This book is not a history lesson, a political manifesto, or a nostalgic tribute. It is a raw, unfiltered exploration of what it means to live inside a nation shaped by collapse, contradiction, and survival. Lebanon: A Country for No One & Everyone is written from lived experience, not distant observation. Lebanon is a place where beauty exists beside destruction, where humor masks grief, where faith coexists with exhaustion, and where hope is constantly rebuilt from ruins.
This book dives into those contradictions without softening them. It examines how wars rewrite memory, how corruption erodes trust, how instability becomes routine, and how an entire population adapts to uncertainty as a way of life. Through reflections on history, society, identity, and daily existence, the book explores how Lebanese people think, cope, love, leave, return, and survive. It speaks of a land that gives intensely and takes mercilessly, of a people who learn resilience not as inspiration, but as necessity.
It confronts the emotional cost of displacement, the weight of inherited trauma, and the quiet strength required to keep moving forward when the future feels permanently delayed. This is not a book written to explain Lebanon politely to the world. It is written to tell the truth, even when that truth is uncomfortable. It challenges romantic narratives, rejects simplified headlines, and refuses to turn suffering into spectacle.
Instead, it offers clarity, honesty, and perspective drawn from within. This book is for Lebanese readers who have lived these realities and never saw them articulated fully. It is for the diaspora who carry Lebanon within them long after leaving its borders. And it is for readers everywhere who want to understand what it means to exist in a country where survival becomes culture and endurance becomes identity.
This book is not for readers seeking comfort, neutrality, or easy conclusions. It is for those willing to listen, reflect, and sit with difficult truths. Lebanon may not belong to anyone. But once you enter these pages, it will stay with you.