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Talk:Maya Al-Hayat

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Improvements

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This author is involved at high and influential levels of Arabic-language TV and literature, it seems, but the article needs a thorough re-write to reflect better organizational principles and, frankly, shortening and condensing to only the most important and notable information about her work. Jackie.salzinger (talk) 06:32, 5 October 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Notability?

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Somebody flagged this article for notability of the subject over a year ago but there are no comments on the talk page either for or against this flag. If the flagger is not interested in arguing for the deletion of the article, can we remove the notability flag? Thanks. Pascalulu88 (talk) 20:55, 18 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Add A Fact: "Excerpt from 'Nobody Knows Their Blood Type'"

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I found a fact that might belong in this article. See the quote below

Here is an excerpt from Maya Abu al-Hayyat’s extraordinary Nobody Knows Their Blood Type. This excerpt, from the section titled “Amahl / Beirut, 1979–1982,” is from the point of view of the central character’s mother as she gets to know her new husband. In it, readers will find some of the brilliant defamiliarization of the human body, the novel’s ultra-closeups, and its sharp-eyed exploration of human relationships.

The fact comes from the following source:

https://arablit.org/2024/10/08/an-excerpt-of-maya-abu-al-hayyats-nobody-knows-their-blood-type/

Here is a wikitext snippet to use as a reference:

 {{Cite web |title=An Excerpt of Maya Abu al-Hayyat’s ‘Nobody Knows Their Blood Type’ |url=https://arablit.org/2024/10/08/an-excerpt-of-maya-abu-al-hayyats-nobody-knows-their-blood-type/ |website=ARABLIT & ARABLIT QUARTERLY |date=2024-10-08 |access-date=2024-10-08 |language=en-US |quote=Here is an excerpt from Maya Abu al-Hayyat’s extraordinary Nobody Knows Their Blood Type. This excerpt, from the section titled “Amahl / Beirut, 1979–1982,” is from the point of view of the central character’s mother as she gets to know her new husband. In it, readers will find some of the brilliant defamiliarization of the human body, the novel’s ultra-closeups, and its sharp-eyed exploration of human relationships.}} 

This post was generated using the Add A Fact browser extension.

Munfarid1 (talk) 09:33, 8 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]