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Gospel of Judas [Paperback]

Simon Mawer (Author)
2.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

July 7, 2005
Amongst the ancient papyri of the Dead Sea, a remarkable scroll is discovered. Written in the first century AD, it purports to be the true account of the life of Jesus, as told by Youdas the sicarios - Judas Iscariot: the missing Gospel of Judas. If authentic, it will be one of the most incendiary documents in the history of humankind. The task of proving - or disproving - its validity falls to Father Leo Newman, one of the world's leading experts in Koine, the demotic Greek of the Roman Empire, and a man the newspapers like to call a 'renegade priest'. But as Leo absorbs himself in Judas' testimony, the stories of his own life haunt him. The story of his forbidden yet irresistible love for a married woman. The story of his mother's passionate and tragic affair amidst the war-time ruins of Rome. They are stories of love and betrayal that may threaten his faith just as deeply as the Gospel of Judas...With a dramatic narrative that spans from the Europe of the Second World War to Jerusalem two thousand years after Jesus' birth, THE GOSPEL OF JUDAS is a compelling and erudite thriller.

Editorial Reviews

Review

'Intelligent, unusual and absorbing' SCOTSMAN; 'Erudite and compelling...the twists are surprising and genuinely tense. There is a great deal in this book...thrillingly readable... an excellent novel' OBSERVER; 'Well informed and vibrantly realised. A thoroughly enjoyable and extremely well written novel' SUNDAY TELEGRAPH

About the Author

Simon Mawer was born in 1948 in England, and spent his childhood there, in Cyprus and in Malta. He now lives with his wife and two children in Italy, and teaches at the English School in Rome.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Abacus (July 7, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0349113580
  • ISBN-13: 978-0349113586
  • Product Dimensions: 5 x 7.6 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.9 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 2.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,855,949 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Simon Mawer was born in 1948 in England, and spent his childhood there, in Cyprus and in Malta. Educated at Millfield School in Somerset and at Brasenose College, Oxford, he took a degree in biology and worked as a biology teacher for many years. His first novel, Chimera, was published by Hamish Hamilton in 1989, winning the McKitterick Prize for first novels. Mendel's Dwarf (1997), his first book to be publish in the US, reached the last ten of the Booker Prize and was a New York Time "Book to Remember" for 1998. The Gospel of Judas, The Fall (winner of the 2003 Boardman Tasker Prize for Mountain Literature) and Swimming to Ithaca followed. In 2009 The Glass Room, his tenth book and eighth novel was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize.

Mawer is married and has two children. He has lived in Italy for the past thirty years.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
2.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not the novel the title leads one to expect., January 29, 2006
By 
Ralph Blumenau (London United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Gospel of Judas (Paperback)
It would be an interesting to read a novel in which Judas tells the Gospel story from his side; but don't be taken in by the title of this book, since most of it is not about that. The first mention of Judas is 140 pages into a 345 page book, then nothing substantial about him for the next 120 pages while Mawer returns to more novelettish if intricately plotted and sometimes quite powerfully dramatic material before picking up the Judas Scroll again. I must not give away the ingeniously constructed theory of who, according to this fictitious papyrus, Jesus actually was and of what happened to his crucified body, but the 30 pages, few as they are, in which the text is deciphered and commented on, are to my mind the most interesting in the book.

Mawer is very knowledgeable about the New Testament, about inter-testamentary history, about the Dead Sea Scrolls, about deciphering papyrus fragments, about the Roman Catholic Church and about the history of Imperial and Christian monuments in and around Rome. The "scholarly" parts are fine; unfortunately they are deeply embedded in a novel which is full of clich?s with which we are familiar in other and better novels about the Catholic Church: the Catholic priest, initially hovering between faith and scepticism, who falls for a seductive married woman (and later, defrocked, has another woman, too); several obligatory passages of erotic writing; nuns "pouring out their confession of peccadillo and scruples"; and, for good measure, a stock Nazi character doing stock Nazi things during the German occupation of Italy after the fall of Mussolini. The language, too, which a blurb on the back finds "poetic", actually varies from the tired clich ("red lipstick made a scar of her mouth") to the irritatingly voulu: "Leo smelt the sour and flinty stench of mendacity". (Mawer has a thing about smells). Every foreign phrase is carefully translated; and sometimes he lectures us on the etymology of words he uses (English, Italian, Greek), irrespective of whether or not that enriches the use of the word in that particular context. Occasional similes are fine (and some in this book are not at all bad), but here we sometimes have several to a page or even a single paragraph, and that device, too, quickly becomes tiresome. There is plenty of symbolism, some again not at all bad, but much of it clunkily obvious. A wilfully and initially confusing mixed up chronology, and an initially confusing alternation between the principal character writing or being written about in a first person and a third person narrative, for which I cannot see any real purpose, added to my annoyance with the mannered way in which this book is written.

If such things do not bother you, you may well be "mesmerized" and "gripped" by the book's "complex plot", as that very distinguished scholar Lisa Jardine, in one of the blurbs on the back, says she was; and you will then feel that I have harped too much on the negatives which so spoilt my enjoyment.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Of love, faith, and betrayal--heaven and hell on earth., October 16, 2005
This review is from: Gospel of Judas (Paperback)
This haunting and ironic novel takes us into the heart, mind, and family history of a dedicated priest living in Rome, giving the reader a rare look at his insecurities, the internal battles he faces, and the constant choices he must make. Father Leo Newman is an expert in ancient scrolls from the Dead Sea. Called to investigate a new, intact scroll in Jerusalem, he makes the startling discovery that this scroll is a record of what happened immediately after the crucifixion, as witnessed by Judas and Paul. Its transcription and publication will call into question the accuracy of the more familiar gospels, all of which were written later than this scroll, and which have, until now, been the underpinnings of Christianity and its traditions.

Mawer takes us into the mind of Father Leo as he battles the demons of doubt unleashed by his discovery, and other, entirely mundane demons represented by his love for Madeleine Brewer, the wife of a diplomat. As the novel spirals from the present to the very near past and into the more distant past of Father Leo's childhood during World War II and back again, we see fascinating parallels between the betrayals Father Leo commits, and those of his mother, and of Judas. The roles of Mary Magdalen, Madeleine, and Magda, all of whom even share a name, continue these intriguing parallels and expand the novel's themes.

As Mawer investigates the many kinds of love--love of mankind, love of God, and romantic love--he also shows us the multiplicity of threats to these kinds of love, and the difficulty of facing personal challenges armed only with black and white arguments. Father Leo, an honest man doing the best he can to be true to his church, is, strictly speaking, guilty of betraying both individuals and the church, while Judas, usually thought of as the most villainous of betrayers, possesses a core of honesty here which calls into question the traditional view of him in later gospels. This tour de force of a novel is a stimulating and thought-provoking study of love and truth, connecting a modern man with a much vilified disciple and raising the big question of whether a long-range good can come from a short-term betrayal and whether the price is worth it.
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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Just skip this one, October 20, 2005
By 
This review is from: Gospel of Judas (Paperback)
This was a truly boring novel, the author skips between three time periods with no seeming reason (the story of his mother gave no added value to the main story plot.) Most of the characters are one sided and I was able to guess what would happen about a quarter of the way through. I only finished the book because I kept hoping it would get better, it never did though.
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