![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() The argument for Chamanzaminli was presented in a special 2011 issue of Azerbaijan International entitled Ali and Nino: The Business of Literature, in which Betty Blair argued that Nussimbaum merely embellished a manuscript of which she surmises that Chamanzaminli must be the "core author," a position that had already been advanced by Chamanaminli's sons and their supporters for some years. A claim for Yusif Vazir Chamanzaminli as author originated in 1971. ![]() In Tom Reiss's 2005 international bestseller The Orientalist: Solving the Mystery of a Strange and Dangerous Life, Reiss makes a thorough case that the novel is the work of Nussimbaum, which continues a claim dating to Nussimbaum's correspondence and writings 1938–1942 and the writings of Ahmed Giamil Vacca-Mazzara in the 1940s. The case for Lev Nussimbaum, aka Essad Bey, as the author originally surfaced in 1944. The true identity behind the pseudonym " Kurban Said" has been the subject of some dispute. There has been a good deal of interest in the authorship of Ali and Nino. 1937 Azerbaijani novel Ali und Nino, first edition in the German language, published by Verlag E.P.Tal & Co, Vienna, 1937 ![]()
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