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Loading... The Gospel of Judas : A Novelpor Simon Mawer
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adorará Adira ao LibraryThing para descobrir se gostará deste livro. Jacket is misleading. Was looking forward to fast-paced, gospel-challenging adventure story. Was very slow and hardly dealt with the actual Judas gospel at all. Wouldn't recommend to anyone for any reason. ( )Leo Newman is both a scholar and a priest. Lately he has been working with newly found documents dating as early or earlier than the gospels. But when a new gospel is apparently found, his world begins to fall apart. He finds his faith shattered. And perhaps even worse, he finds himself falling in love with a married woman who has secrets of her own. The novel took about a hundred pages or so to really get started, and those first hundred pages were the most fragmented and difficult to comprehend. After those first few chapters, it became much more engrossing. The book really has three stories going on simultaneously, each taking place at a different time. One is the story of Leo's mother during World War II, the second takes place during the recent past when the "Gospel of Judas" is found, and the third is the present, after Leo has played his part in the documents translation. This format didn't work as well as it could have, but it was interesting to see the story from three different perspectives: before, during, and after. Ultimately, the story was rather depressing and not everything was resolved by the end, but it was an intense read. Experiments in Reading Finding this difficult to get into. Not sure if its structure or writing that's the block. Or if its my idea of what the story was to be. I have the idea that it would be an interplay of historical and contemporary events leading to a mutual story development. Rather then a crisis of faith story. I need the space to have to read it so I can get into its world. I had a similar problem with Catch 22 when reading it 30 years ago. I could never get past the first chapter. In the end I started with the 2nd and then was drawn in to its magic. sem resenhas | adicionar uma resenha
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Mawer skillfully interleaves three narratives: the story of Leo's German mother's life in Rome during World War II, a woman who was herself forced to choose between principle and passion; the unsettling story of Leo's relationship with Madeleine and the scroll; and a circumspect "present," in which Leo is still "a hermit in a cave, a hermit who was hoarding the few fragments of his faith lest they too be swept away by circumstance."
The novel represents a solemn quest, striving back toward half-forgotten origins in an attempt to bring order to a present and future spinning out of control. Its most poignant irony is that Leo is at once creator and destroyer--as he pieces together the story of the scroll, he is simultaneously unraveling his own faith, his own raison d'être:
A dun-colored fibrous fragment hung there behind the glass, a fragment of papyrus the color of biscuit, inscribed with the most perfect letters ever man devised, words wrought in the lean and ragged language of the eastern Mediterranean, the workaday language of the streets, the meaning half apprehended, half grasped, half heard through the noise of all that lies between us and them, the shouting, roaring centuries of darkness and enlightenment. How was it possible to communicate to her the pure, organic thrill?The thrill, thanks to Mawer, is ours. --Kelly Flynn
(retirado da Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:05 -0400)
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| eLivros | Áudio | Troca |
| — | — | 19/5 |