Jamal Jabar Gharib was born in 1961 in Qaladze, South Kurdistan. He completed his primary, secondary and high school education in the city. He went to Baghdad to complete his studies. In 1985, he was admitted to the College of Arts, Baghdad University. He began as a storyteller in the early 1980s and published his first story in Bayan magazine called Pasharaw. He began writing novels in the 1990s and published several novels in magazines, especially Raman. His best-known novels are The Honor of Tozuba and Women of Water. He started writing and publishing novels in the mid-1990s.
$Some of this author's novels$
• Sheikh of Damus
• The world in a book
• The fifth book
• I write about rain
• The nation of the sewers
• The nation of the sewers
• Zebra is a name for my tombstone
• Short novels
• A touch of heaven
• A sculpture of knife dust
In addition to novels and stories, Jabar Jamal Gharib has written several researches and analyzes on Kurdish and foreign stories, theater and novels. Sardam later published them in an independent book called Reading Books. In the field of children's literature, he has published three books: You Know Me, The Descent of Angels. This is in addition to many researches and cultural and intellectual articles published in magazines and newspapers. These include the legend of settlement, crying from Mahmoud Pasha of Baban to Qalamara, voice from the asphalt gramophone to Radio Nawa, the black box of pictures or the black box of secrets, Kurds and migration and benefits. The role of religions in the formulation of Kurdish culture (Islam, Christianity, Judaism), stories in the Torah (It is an independent book for a detailed study of the stories in the Torah.)[1]