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= Yahya Qassem Sebei = From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yahya Qassem Sebei, (Tohami dialect: Yahya Amqasem), a Saudi novelist, writer and researcher, born on March 14, 1972. He became famous and was widely known after the publication of his first novel, The Leg of the Crow (The Escape), published in 2008.[1] He was born in the village of Al-Hussaini in the Sabya Governorate, in the Jazan region in Saudi Arabia,[2] and obtained a Bachelor’s degree in 1997 in Law, and has been working as a legal advisor since 1999.[3]

= Biography = The Saudi novelist and writer Yahya Qassem Sebai was born on March 14, 1972 in the village of Al-Husseini in the Sabya Governorate, in the Jazan region in Saudi Arabia.[2] 1997 AD, and he worked as a legal advisor from 1999 AD. He published a number of literary texts through newspapers, and wrote for a number of Saudi newspapers such as Al-Sharq newspaper, Okaz newspaper, and Al-Hayat newspaper,[4] and he previously published a collection of short stories entitled (Al-Makhsh) in 2000 AD, He released his second novel (The Winter's Man) in 2017, which revolves around his experience working at the Saudi Cultural Attache in Paris.[5] He became famous and was widely known after the publication of his first novel, The Leg of the Crow (The Escape), which was published in 2008. The novel dealt with one of the most sensitive topics. It chronicles in a literary and narrative manner the events that took place during the Saudi army’s entry into Tihama and the Jazan region specifically for its incorporation into Saudi rule and the era. That followed the entry, and the novel was translated into French in 2019, and the critic Yigal Arrera wrote about it in the French newspaper Le Monde,[5][6] and he was chosen in 2010 among 39 Arab writers to participate in the Beirut 39 ceremony, on the occasion of choosing Beirut as the world capital of the book. [4] He worked for the Cultural Office at the Saudi Embassy in Paris during (2007-2010), and also worked as a cultural supervisor at the Saudi Cultural Attaché in Beirut during (2011-2015). He also participated in a number of conferences and cultural forums in the Arab Gulf states, Algeria, Tunisia, Morocco, France, Rome, Cairo, Lebanon, and Sana'a.[4] And editorial advisor to a number of Arab publishing houses. He worked in partnership with the photographer Ziad Antar to direct the exhibition (After the Image) in Beirut, which dealt with pictures and written stories the history of the mountains of southwestern Saudi Arabia.[7][8] He has participated in a number of intellectual and literary meetings, and conferences on the Arab novel, stories and folk tales, and has been working as a legal advisor since 1999 until now.

= Author's Work =


 * He writes for a number of Saudi newspapers, such as Al-Sharq newspaper, Okaz, Al-Hayat.
 * Associate researcher in the history of the short story (the Saudi story as a model).
 * Worked on the history of Saudi cultural attachés since 2013.

= His writing =


 * The Winter Man, a novel (2017).
 * The Crow's Leg..The Escape, a novel (2008).


 * Al-Makhsh, a collection of short stories (2000).

= Reference =


 * 1) "Yahya Iqasem". The House of Enlightenment. Archived from the original on June 29, 2021. Retrieved it on June 29, 2021.
 * 2) ^ Jump up to: AB novel The Leg of the Crow, Novel Supplement, About the Author, Page 309, Culture House Edition for Publishing and Distribution
 * 3) ^ Novelist Yahya Maqasem promoted to 12th rank in education. Okaz. 2020-09-22. Archived from the original on October 02, 2020. Retrieved June 29, 2021.
 * 4) ^ Jump up to: ABC "Yahya Muqasem | Katara Prize for Arabic Fiction". Katara Prize for Arabic Fiction. Archived from the original on September 21, 2017. Retrieved April 10, 2019.
 * 5) Skip to top for: AB Makki, prepared by: Ali (03-14-2017). Yahya Maqasem for “Okaz”: The serious and committed intellectual is completely confiscated.” Okaz. Archived from the original on December 16, 2019. Accessed on March 23, 2019.
 * 6) ^ "The Crow's Leg" novel by Saudi Yahya Amqasem in French translation. Arabic Independent. 2019-04-08. Archived from the original on April 10, 2019. Retrieved April 10, 2019.
 * 7) ^ "The mountains of southwest Saudi Arabia «Beyond the picture»". The Middle East. Archived from the original on April 10, 2019. Retrieved April 10, 2019.
 * 8) ^ "Yahya Aksam". Katara Prize for Arabic Fiction. Archived from the original on May 18, 2020. Retrieved June 29, 2021.
 * 9) ^ "The Biography of the Writer and Novelist Yahya Amqasem". The messenger. Archived from the original on June 29, 2021. Retrieved it on June 29, 2021.