François Déroche, professor at the Collège de France, is the world’s foremost authority on early Qur’anic manuscripts and a leading scholar of the history of the Arabic book. Malcolm DeBevoise has translated more than forty works from French and Italian in every branch of scholarship. He is a three-time winner of the French-American Foundation translation prize for nonfiction.
“With four decades of painstaking manuscript research behind him,
there is no one better placed than François Déroche to write the
history—and tell the story—of how the Quran went from words uttered
by Muhammad to inviolable canonical scripture. This is a
meticulous, lucid, and fascinating book.”—Shawkat Toorawa, Yale
University
“A masterful and clearly written synthesis of Déroche’s pioneering
and pathbreaking scholarship on early Islamic manuscripts over the
past three decades.”—David Stephan Powers, Cornell University
“The author engages in true investigation . . . connecting the
Qur’anic text, the theory of ‘readings,’ and different layers of
tradition in their historical context with his observations
from manuscripts of the seventh and eighth centuries. He thus shows
that, from the time of the Prophet until about the tenth century, a
plurality was at work in various ways, revealing an approach to the
Qur’an and its transmission very different from the literalism that
has been observed.”—Jean-Marc Balhan, Revue Études
“A summary of the author’s life’s work: Déroche is a master of
manuscripts, and very artfully takes the reader through the
earliest ones.”—David Cook, Rice University
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