Is this right?
Looks about right. I haven't started Red Tent yet, but I expect to have it done by next week.
'Potential'
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***SPOILER ALERT***
Is this right?
Looks about right. I haven't started Red Tent yet, but I expect to have it done by next week.
DAmmit, I was at the library last night, I should have checked for the book. The only things I've participated in are when I own the book.
A bit off topic, but I finished The Gift of Asher Lev and liked it, although I didn't think it had nearly as powerful a message as the first book.
I didn't think so either, Wolfram.
Which Book of the Bible is The Red Tent based on? And which Bible can it be found in? Because I was thinking it would be kind of cool to read them in tandem.
Which Book of the Bible is The Red Tent based on?
Most of the biblical parts come from chapter 34 of Genesis. (And the several chapters before it, too, but that's where the main part of Dina's story comes from.)
Yeah, Gift isn't quite as good, but I think Potok got tired of being pestered for a resolution. It's not bad, just not as good.
Well, I just finished My Name is Asher Lev last week on the cruise. (I realize that I am several months behind. I love to read, but school always gets in the way.)
Anyway, I've read most of the comments. I really enjoyed the book, although I think I would have been part of the group pestering for resolution. It's hard for me to put a book down and feel like it's over if there's no resolution.
There's a lot I could say, but one thing that really jumped out at me was how much I wished I could see what Potok was describing. He was very visual, but I really wanted to see it.
You mean the paintings? I know, my knowledge of modern art is insufficient to properly visualize what they must have looked like. My brain kept going to this El Greco/Dali place.
The paintings, the sculptures, his apartment in Paris, the street in Brooklyn. Also, I would have liked to have seen the progession from Asher's drawings (not art) to his paintings (art). The Kahn character made the point that drawing something is not always art. I get that in my head, but it would have been really neat to have actually seen it.
A movie would probably ruin it, though.