Khalil Gibran's classic collection of poetic essays
Khalil Gibran was born into an impoverished Christian family in Bsharri, Lebanon in 1883. His masterpiece, The Prophet, was first published in 1923 and is among the most-read books of the last century, inspiring the lyric-writing of John Lennon, among others. But Gibran enjoyed only scant recognition in his own time - his health broken by chronic illness and self-neglect, he died in 1931 aged just 48, in his adopted home of New York. He is buried at Bsharri, where his tomb, now a museum, is visited by more than 50,000 pilgrims annually.
I have loved many books over the years, but the one I would never
be parted from and read again and again is The Prophet by Kahlil
Gibran . . . Each time I open the book I find myself feeling that
if the whole world was to read it, it would be a far better
place
*Independent*
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