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Loading... Two Women Of Galileeby Mary Rourke
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Mary Rourke has created a ficticious tale concerning Joanna who is only briefly mentioned in the Bible. She is wiife to Chuza (King Herod's chief steward) and also a follower of Jesus. This is a great read! The two woman are Mary, the mother of Jesus, and Joanna, the wife of the Herod's chief steward Chuza. Joanna only gets a brief mention in the Bible, but here the author has her tell her story in detail. Along the way she does a great job of capturing the historial feel of the first century. Joanna is also a believable character, from her motivation to meet Jesus because of a personal illness to her subsequent support of his ministry. Her life changes drastically, but she finds something she was missing along the way. The only quibble I had with this book was the words the author put in Jesus' mouth (always a risky proposition). I wasn't sure about the message she seemed to be trying to push there, that it was a genuine "Jesus" message. But of course that is a matter of my own opinion, the rest of the story was wonderful and I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoys historical/Biblical fiction. no reviews | add a review
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Wife to Chuza, King Herod's chief steward, Joanna lives a life of luxury in the city of Sepphoris, the jewel of the Galilee. Yet not even the finest doctors can restore health to her lungs, which have ailed her since childhood. But Joanna has heard talk of a local healer, and the rumors intrigue her. She has only once seen this Jesus of Nazareth from a distance, thronged by mobs proclaiming his latest miracle. His mother is Joanna's own cousin Mary, whose family disowned Joanna's for forsaking Jewish law in favor of Roman customs. Intending to ask her estranged cousin to arrange a meeting with her son, Joanna sets off on the dusty road to Nazareth.
Jesus indeed has the power to heal Joanna's body, but it is her soul that blossoms through her friendship with Mary, and as one of his disciples. But as word of Jesus' miracles reaches Herod's court and the ruler becomes increasingly wary of his fame among the people, intrigue, treachery and murder cast shadows onto Joanna's new path, changing her life forever.
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:16 -0400)
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After her healing she gets a renewed sense of her Jewish heritage, and she becomes a follower of the great teacher, a move fraught with danger in the Roman world that she lives. As Jesus moves toward his fate, Joanna is caught between the Roman world, where her loyalties are in question. Herod is mad - and has no respect for life - or for loyalty - in fact loyalty is often repaid in death.
Mary Rourke tells the Crucifixion story, but from a social point of view - rather than spiritual - she writes about human relationships and the politics of the time is kept in the background - and no doctrine is rammed down the readers throat. It is a very easy to read and gentle tale with a respectable mix of religion, suspense, murder and romance. (