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Women's Fiction
The Red Tent

The Red Tent

List Price: $14.95
Your Price: $10.17
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Too Bizarre
Review: With each chapter I debated whether to continue. Although it is mildly entertaining at moments, I am somewhat offended by the author's need to alter events from that which is recorded in the Bible. I am mystified as to the motivation behind such alterations. In some cases the truth is more dramatic than this retelling. Furthermore, I am at a loss to understand the author's need to portray her religious forefathers (and mothers) in such a poor light.

The author's frequent use of misplaced modifiers kept me guessing - - disappointing from a journalist.

Someone else's review said, "Don't believe the hype." I say Amen!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Well worth reading
Review: This book was very interesting and well worth it. I thought it was well written and even though it does have focus on becoming a woman and childbearing it still is more than that. It tells the story of the women on how families were in those times and also has a bit of romance to it also. This will be the book my book club will be reading this month. That is how much I truly enjoyed reading it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Pick this book up as soon as possible...
Review: The Red Tent shows the women behind the bible stories of Jacob and Joseph. You're drawn into their world... a world of love, happiness, children, pagen gods, and grief only a woman can know. All this is shared by the various women of the tribe when they gather in the red tent monthly. A book you are not likely to forget! :-)

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Disappointing and disturbing
Review: I do not understand the glowing reviews for this book. The first half reads like a gynecology course for the ancients. (I must admit the second half improves, but not enough to carry the book.)

It is clear that the author has a dim regard for the men of the bible, and she takes every opportunity to trash them while simultaneously elevating the women to priesthood. The women follow a goofy religion of gods and goddesses, worshiping mother earth, which culminates in a disturbing ritual at a girl's first menses.

This is supposed to be historical fiction about the early Jews, yet the women don't even know about Abraham's God, and it doesn't seem that the men do much in this regard, either. I had hoped for a glimpse into early Judiasm, and was sadly disappointed.

The basic story is interesting, but could be told in about three pages. The rest is tedious prose. Don't waste your time on this one.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: It was over too soon.
Review: I LOVED The Red Tent. I was concerned that it would read like the King James Version of the Bible (so-and-so begot who, and so-and-so begot who-else), but instead of being cryptic and difficult to follow, it flowed so easily. The pictures Diamante painted where truly poetic. She added so many more nuances to everyday exchanges and occurances than I ever would have attributed to them. The commonplace became profound. - And that's just the language used to tell the story.

The story itself was riveting. I wanted it to go on and on. This is the kind of book that makes most other things I read very ordinary.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Don't believe the hype.
Review: This book is shallow, glib, pandering, and, from what I have been able to find out, not historically accurate. Not interesting. Not well-written. If you are interested in re-tellings of Bible stories, check out Jim Crace's Quarantine. It's literate, intelligent, and a creative piece of fiction.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wonderful Story
Review: When I finished reading this book, the feeling that I had been there stayed with me and still to this day, I can imagine how it might have felt to be in the Red Tent. Anita Diamant has created a scenario of women's lives in the time before women's lives were recorded because they were not considered to be very important compared to men. Did these women have special ceremonies, stories, songs and rituals they performed when they were separated from their men during menses or after childbirth? I certainly hope so. The book is rich with visuals. How much of it is true? If you are not a stickler for historical accuracy, you will love this book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: good summer read
Review: After reading several of these reviews. I decided to put in my own review especially after reading the first one that completely trashed the book. I read this book upon my mother's recommendation and found it to be a fascinating and quick read. Since much of the bible is protested and indeed people have argued that the bible has not one but many authors and is based on an oral tradition, then it can be very likely that this story could of been just as true as any other telling of the stories of the bible. The book indeed seems to put many of the male figures in the bible into a more crude light, but the history of the women who were briefly mentioned in the bible itself is illuminating. The mythological references in the book are also true to the mythology that existed in Mesopotamia during the days of Abraham and Isaac. I think this book is an essential read to many young women who look for more realistic heroines and real life struggles. It is defenitely worth putting on your summer reading list.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A great story of biblical times from a woman's view
Review: Told in the first person, but with a objective voice, this unique story gives a very thought-provoking view of a Biblical story. A very refreshing read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Literary magic!
Review: THE RED TENT is a wonderfully rich and imaginative novel, set firmly in the ancient culture of Canaan where Jacob, the son of Isaac, took up residence with his four wives during his exile. Narrated by Dinah, the daughter of Jacob and Leah, this story is not a re-telling of the tales so familiar to Jews and Christians, but rather it explores what is not told: the story of the women. As the only daughter raised by Jacob's wives, Dinah is the heir to her mothers' stories and knowledge. The sequestering of women, both in daily chores and during their menses, gives rise to a sisterhood and a subculture unknown to the men, and the intimacy shared in the red tent is what shapes and sustains Dinah, even after a tragic event rips her from it. Both wistful and celebratory in tone, this novel has real literary magic.

Diamant uses a dreamy, spiritual language that draws the reader into the heart of the story. Jacob's wives are clearly drawn, as individuals and as sisters, rivals and friends. The male characters, while distinct, are not as fully realized, mostly because they reside outside the realm of women. Although I cannot attest to the accuracy of ancient cultural detail, Diamant has convinced me that she has researched her subject matter well, supplying details that root her story in its time.

Readers should not expect to find confirmation of Judaic-Christian beliefs: the religion here is one of multiple gods and goddesses, the beliefs of the women Jacob married but not his own. Some might even find it sacrilegious in its re-interpretation and expansion of Biblical events, which form only the framework around which this novel is built. Unless you are easily offended by such approaches, don't turn away from the book because of this. Diamant has painted an entire world that should not be missed.

Like the red tent, this book might drive away men, but women will find its riches rewarding. I highly recommend it for serious and casual readers alike.


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