«المساكين» هو كتاب نثري صِيغَتْ صورُه من آلام النفس الإنسانية في صورة قصصية يرويها لنا الكاتب على لسان الشيخ علي شيخ المساكين، الذي يقصُّ مأساةَ الفقر والعَوَزِ الإنساني في رحاب قصصٍ تحمل الكثير من العِبَر والعِظات الدينية والاجتماعية. ويعرض الرافعي في هذا الكتاب فلسفة الفقر التي يصيغ تفاصيلها بواسطة أدواتٍ من البلاغة الأدبية التي عَهِدْناها منه؛ لأنه المبدع الذي ينظر إلى مأساة الفقر بنظرة الفيلسوف ومداد الأديب الذي يحوِّل مأساة الواقع إلى صورةٍ بلاغية تحوِّل الفقر إلى طاقة إبداعية، تضع الفقر في صفحاتٍ من الحكمة الفلسفية والبلاغة الأدبية
إن الكتاب الذي بين يديك ،سيعرفك على مبادئ مهمة جداً في النجاح ، مما سيسهم في تغيير حياتك إلى الأفضل بإن الله ، وسنزيد من مستوى الفاعلية و الإنجاز في يومك
On a deep wound that requires ages to heal, the novelist, Kim Ecklin, presses to open a biography of genocide, and travels from the farthest west to the farthest east, to tell part of the tragedy of an Asian country, recording part of the testimonies of the living survivors, and those who wrote small signs, bearing two words. “We will not forget,” and they hung it on tree trunks, and it was also motivated by the story of a woman she met in the market of the Cambodian capital, Phnom Penh, who lost all of her family members at that time, and when the Canadian author asked her: “Can I help?” What can I do? Her answer was: “Nothing, I just wanted you to know.”
In late October, a writer specializing in the lives of saints gives a lecture in a remote northern Swedish village. After the lecture ends, an old man approaches her to tell her that she will stay with him for the night.
Her stay with him is prolonged due to a snow storm that cuts off the road, during which she learns more about the life of her host Hadar, who suffers from cancer, and the strange competition that links him with his brother and neighbor Ulf, who suffers from heart disease.
About two brothers who share a lot in common and are linked by a tangled relationship of jealousy, rivalry, guilt, and a strange guest who becomes the engine of this relationship, Torgny Lindgren tells with dark irony in his Auguste Prize-winning novel, Sweetness, a different story about brotherhood.