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Acclaimed Lebanese novelist Emily Nasrallah, left, met in 1971 with Beirut's Pen Club president, writer and researcher Jamil Jabre, novelist Halim Barakat, the late Palestinian author Ghassan Kanafani and Lebanese novelist Yussef Habshi al-Ashqar.

Acclaimed Lebanese author and feminist Emily Nasrallah, who articulated women's experiences in her writing about Lebanon's civil war, has died at the age of 87, her daughter said.

Her writing touched on women's determination, migration and the terror of Lebanon's 1975-90 Civil War. She was the author of several books for adults and children and was awarded regional and international prizes for her work. Maha Nasrallah said her mother passed away in Beirut on Tuesday following a battle with cancer. Ms. Nasrallah began her career as a journalist and published her first book, Birds of September, in 1962, to critical acclaim.

She possessed a distinctively hybrid style that melded the poetic with the descriptive, said Sirene Harb, an associate professor of comparative literature at the American University of Beirut. Several of her books were translated into foreign languages.

"You really travel through the pages. It's not any more a book that you have in front of you, it's something you have inside of you," Ms. Harb said.

Ms. Nasrallah was born in the village of Kfeir in Mount Lebanon in 1931 and moved to Beirut at a young age. Along with several other women writers, including Hanan al-Shaykh, she stayed in Lebanon during the civil war, writing from a perspective that transcended the political and patriarchal narratives of the conflict.

Her feminism was "reflected in her representation of strong and rebellious female characters, and role models who challenge patriarchal traditions," Ms. Harb said. Birds of September continues to be taught in schools throughout Lebanon.

Prime Minister Saad Hariri tweeted: "Lebanon and the Arab world lost an icon of literature and Lebanese creativity, and a women's rights activist."

Nasrallah leaves her four children.

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