An Article by A.V. (817 words, 4 min. read)
Reading Le nom des rois (The Name of Kings) at Editions Stock, is like stepping back into a Lebanon that feels both distant and achingly close. Charif Majdalani does not simply tell the story of a childhood; he restores a country that once glowed with light, refinement, and laughter. In his sentences, we hear again the murmur of salons, see the glow of shaded lamps, and feel the joy of a society that believed it would last forever. His writing gives back to us a Lebanon that was magnificent and fragile, a paradise that slipped away before we even realized its end had begun.
The Dream of Kings
As a teenager, the author surrounded himself with stories of kings and dynasties, of empires that once seemed eternal. In genealogies, in maps of forgotten lands, in tales of epic battles, he sought order and beauty. Those epic storiesoffered him the illusion that life could follow the rhythm of legend, that history carried within it grandeur rather than cruelty. The names of kings he listed became his guardians, protecting him from the ordinary, keeping him safe in the realm of dreams.

Nawal, the Fallen King, and the Denial of War
In that suspended world, Nawal reigned quietly over the kitchen, cooking her mouloukhie and vine leaves like small treasures of tenderness. Around her table gathered cousins, companions, and the boy who appeared like the son of a king stripped of his crown. Afternoons stretched into long games of Risk, where empires rose and fell across a board while, outside, the real world prepared its own ruthless conquests. Unlike the others who clung to their illusions, Nawal alone sensed the truth. She understood, before even the parents dared to admit it, that war was already present among them. Denial continued in the mountains, where the young narrator discovered first loves and the lightness of summer days. Families lived as if nothing had changed, as if those peaks could remain forever untouched. Yet soon the beloved mountains became places of exile, havens for the displaced. This refusal to see, this stubborn way of carrying on, reveals not only the blindness of innocence but also the resilience that has always defined the Lebanese spirit: the strength to keep living even when history crashes at the door.
The Collapse of Innocence
The rupture, however, could not be delayed forever. Majdalani captures that instant with words that move:
« Et d’un seul coup, le monde qui servait de décor à tout cela s’écroula. J’en avais été un témoin distrait, mais le bruit qu’il provoqua en s’effondrant me fit lever la tête et ce que je vis alors n’était plus qu’un univers de violence et de mort. » (“And suddenly, the world that had served as the backdrop for all of this crumbled. I had been a distracted witness, but the noise it made as it fell made me lift my head, and what I saw then was nothing more than a universe of violence and death.”)
In that moment, the dream of kings shattered. What had been distant and legendary became immediate and brutal. The games, the stories, the laughter, all gave way to the harshness of war. Teenage ended in the sound of collapse.

From Games to Survival
War in The Name of Kings never arrives in a single stroke. It seeps into daily life like a shadow. Meals, conversations, family rituals, all begin to fracture under its weight. We see how the ordinary slips away without notice, how what once seemed permanent becomes memory. The innocence of adolescence, once protected by books and games, gives way to exile, barricades, and silence. The mountains, once theaters of discovery and silent joy, become landscapes of refuge.
A Chronicle of a Lost Paradise
What makes this autobiographical novel so moving is that it speaks for all of us. It is a story of one boy, yet it is also the story of a generation that saw its paradise disappear. Majdalani’s prose is sumptuous, yet tender, dignified, yet filled with mourning. Through his words, memory itself becomes resistance. He reminds us that to forget would be the final defeat. To remember is to keep alive what war tried to erase.
A Work Worthy of the Goncourt
Nominated for the prestigious Prix Goncourt, The Name of Kings stands as one of those rare works of literature that bind together truth and beauty, innocence and loss, memory and survival. It deserves its place among the great novels of our time. In its pages we feel both the tenderness of what was lost and the urgency of preserving it. Majdalani shows us that writing is not only an act of memory but an act of defiance. His novel refuses silence, refuses resignation, and reminds us that Lebanon must never become only a legend, only a forgotten “name of kings,” but remain a land that still demands to be saved.

