-Abdal Hakim Murad, author of Travelling Home and Dean of Cambridge Muslim College
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Learning to Pray is a masterpiece. Yahia Lababidi is a lyrical genius touched by the genies. I wonder how he is able, time after time, to work such miracles-authentic and truly beautiful.
-Peter Zsoldos, Ambassador of the Slovak Republic and poetry translator
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Despite its insistence that the mystic "swoons, / defenseless / in the face of beauty," the real mysticism of Lababidi's book of longing is not private but shared: the speaker swoons, and leaves the reader defenseless in the face of beauty.
-H. L. Hix, American poet, academic and editor
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In lean, luminescent verse, Lababidi has created a portal into quiet worlds, guiding us to be our best selves. He reminds us of the richness of the stilled and savored. In difficult times, his poems help the reader to summon courage and beauty.
-Carla Power, author of Prodigal Son and former Newsweek correspondent
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Lababidi believes that there is a common denominator between the philosopher and the poet, both of whom struggle to build a bridge between two worlds, the world of the visible and the world of the invisible, and here writing becomes a form of prayer.
-Osama Esber, Syrian poet, publisher and translator