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Rebekah: Women of Genesis
 
 
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Rebekah: Women of Genesis [Audio CD]

Orson Scott Card (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (42 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Women of Genesis September 2005
Born into a time and place where a woman speaks her mind at her own peril, and reared as a motherless child by a doting father, Rebekah grew up to be a stunning headstrong beauty. She was chosen by God for a special duty. For Rebekah must leave her fathers house to marry Isaac, the studious young son of the Patriarch Abraham. Her struggles to find her place in the family of Abraham are a true test of her fait, but through it all she finds her own relationship with God and does her best to serve His cause in the lives of those she loves. In Rebekah, Orson Scott Card has created an astonishing personality, complex and intriguing, and her story will engage your heart as it captures your imagination.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"This series is definitely for those interested in women in the Bible, and in such novels as The Red Tent."--Kliatt
--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.

About the Author

Orson Scott Card is one of the nation's most acclaimed and bestselling authors.

He has been the recipient of numerous awards. His novel Stone Tables was honored by Booklist as one of its top 10 Christian novels for 1999. Mr. Card's Sarah: Women of Genesis was the first of a trilogy about women of the Bible, and the second installment in that series, Rebekah, will be released this fall.

Mr. Card's works have been translated into many languages, including Catalan, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Slovakian, Spanish, and Swedish.

In addition to writing novels, Mr. Card has written plays, short stories and nonfiction works, including two books on writing.

Born in Riceland, Washington, he grew up in California, Arizona and Utah. He lived in Brazil for two years as an unpaid missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He received degrees from Brigham Young University and the University of Utah. He currently lives with his wife Kristine and family in Greensboro, North Carolina. Each of their children is named after a famous writer.


Product Details

  • Audio CD
  • Publisher: Shadow Mountain (September 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1590385012
  • ISBN-13: 978-1590385012
  • Product Dimensions: 5.4 x 5.2 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (42 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,191,932 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Orson Scott Card is the bestselling author best known for the classic Ender's Game, Ender's Shadow and other novels in the Ender universe. Most recently, he was awarded the 2008 Margaret A. Edwards Award for lifetime achievement in Young Adult literature, from the American Library Association. Card has written sixty-one books, assorted plays, comics, and essays and newspaper columns. His work has won multiple awards, including back-to-back wins of the Hugo and the Nebula Awards-the only author to have done so in consecutive years. His titles have also landed on 'best of' lists and been adopted by cities, universities and libraries for reading programs. The Ender novels have inspired a Marvel Comics series, a forthcoming video game from Chair Entertainment, and pre-production on a film version. A highly anticipated The Authorized Ender Companion, written by Jake Black, is also forthcoming.Card offers writing workshops from time to time and occasionally teaches writing and literature at universities.Orson Scott Card currently lives with his family in Greensboro, NC.

 

Customer Reviews

42 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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22 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Astonishing retelling of the biblical story of Rebekah, October 30, 2002
By 
Bryan Erickson (Eagan, Minnesota) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
"Rebekah" tells the intimate life's story of the Old Testament woman of the same name: wife of Isaac, mother of Jacob and Esau. The woman who is so widely familiar to anyone who's ever attended Sunday school is also so little known. Orson Scott Card, acting as historian and believer as well as novelist, uses a few chapters from the book of Genesis as the jumping-off point in a quest to imagine the story of Rebekah's life. What did she go through that would eventually lead a real, flesh-and-blood woman to have the faith she had, but also to commit her famous deception of her prophet-husband by jockeying her favorite son into the inheritance in place of Esau, the rightful heir?

After "Sarah," the first in series-happy OS Card's "Women of Genesis" series, I had been a little disappointed. Card has long been trying to overcome his sci-fi fame to direct some attention to other genres like his religious-themed novels. He often does this by blurring the lines between the two, adding religious miracle to fantasy and science fiction on the spectrum of speculative fiction. However, even with such as "Stone Tables", he had succeeded brilliantly in showing he could drive a historical religious novel with no traditional sci-fi or fantasy theme with the same gripping character-driven plotting that has made his sci-fi novels so well-loved. Unfortunately, "Sarah" seemed like something of a misstep, where the good and happy characters were brightly delineated from the evil and miserable ones, at the expense of a compelling story. But be warned, anyone who has so far let the first episode's flaws prevent them from picking up Round Two. In "Rebekah," Card has regained his balance and is in top form again. This time, the bad guys behave pretty well and the good guys get pretty bad, everyone struggles, and any moral clarity has to be well-earned if it can be come by at all. Although the difference could be blamed on the source material, since the novels follow a mandate of at least loose consistency with the relevant passages from the biblical Genesis, there is still a clear distinction in choices made by the author. After all, "Sarah" avoided the most difficult, and juiciest, story opportunity by ending right before Abraham's attempt to sacrifice Isaac, while Rebekah's toughest moment in the afore-mentioned "switcheroo" is made to seem just a natural continuation of a lifetime of moral dilemma.

The issue of both biblical consistency and relative lack thereof is actually fascinating. Card takes some pretty well-justified creative liberties to fill in the quite substantial gaps the scriptures leave in the life-story of Rebekah, Isaac, and their various family, that form a rich source of surprising complexity in the family and character dynamics. Occasionally this comes in the form of fun feminist and otherwise irreverent retorts to the male-dominated Bible, but more often it takes shape as a much more convoluted background to explain the biblically depicted idiosyncrasies in this holy family. And I really mean convoluted; Card can rival "Memento" for the cleverness with which he sets up personal relationships and chains of consequences that obliquely dovetail in ways you suddenly realize were inevitable. Also clever is the consistency with which he addresses the prevalent theme of faith in a miraculous God from the point of view of the main characters. Anyone, regardless of personal beliefs, could read and enjoy the novel and accept that the characters' perception of divine action makes just as much sense as any character seeing the world through the lens of his own preconceptions. At the same time, Card paints a fair depiction of earnest believers and their honest morality and faith, that forms a more compelling and understandable explanation of Judeo-Christian faith than most literature explicitly intended for that purpose. Nevertheless, though Rebekah's God comforts, he does so sparingly. In "Rebekah" as often in life, there are no easy answers, no enemies without endearing qualities and family connections, and no loved ones without mutually inconsistent priorities and goals that are apparently insurmountable more often than not. For being based on a story so familiar, this novel is far above most from-scratch novels in suspending the reader's wonder in how things will turn out next.

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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Old Testament stories in novel form, January 1, 2002
By 
This is the second of Orson Scott Card's "Women of Genesis" novels, each of which can be read independently of the others. (The others are "Sarah" and "Rachel and Leah.")

Card, who's a Mormon, uses the biblical story of Rebekah as a framework and creatively fills in the details. Once again, he has done an impressive job of making sense of some odd biblical scenes and has told an engaging story that is also spiritually nourishing. I wished, though, that Card had filled in more of the details. The book felt too sketchy in some places. And like Sarah in the first book in the series, Rebekah was, I thought, a little too easy to identify with. In her attitudes about gender roles, indentured servants, and such, she seemed too much like a time traveler from 21st-century America who'd taken Rebekah's place. The use of casual, contemporary diction in the dialogue added to this effect.

This isn't among my favorite Orson Scott Card books, but that's tough competition. I've enjoyed the "Women of Genesis" books enough that I hope there will be more in the series. I liked Card's "Stone Tables," a novelization of the life of Moses, even better, and I also recommend his "Saints," about one of the wives of Joseph Smith, founder of the Mormons.
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars We Hurt Those We Love Most -- With the Best of Intentions, March 30, 2005
By 
Gregory S., Hill (Philadelphia, PA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Does anyone tell a Bible story as wonderfully as Orson Scott Card? I have loved every one of the Women of Genesis books. This one is my favorite.

Mr. Card takes plenty of artistic liberty with the Bible stories, but the characters he creates are truly memorable. Bethuel and Laban come to life. Rebekah, the motherless child and the fiercely devout mother-to-be of Israel, emerges both as magnificently noble and achingly human. Abraham and Isaace emerge as richly complex personalities that alternately aggravate and inspire. There are no Demigods here, but there are many admirable people doing the best they know how to cope with difficult conflicts, with tragic and heroic consequences.

There is no doubt that these people love and respect each other, and yet they torment each other because of the blindnesses we all have in dealing with those we love from perspectives that are inevitably colored (and clouded) by our own intense past experiences. Rebekah has practically worshipped the legend of her Uncle Abraham all of her life, but finds when she lives under his rule that he has his human frailties, and they cause her (and Isaac) great pain. She and Isaac discover their own frailties and insecurities (warranted and unwarranted), which cause significant pain to each other, to Abraham, and to their treasured sons. In so many instances, they repeat the life patterns they most wanted to avoid.

We see emerging, from all of this pain, the searing and purifying insights that God offers to us all as a refiner's fire, if we are humble enough and courageous enough to embrace them. Abraham, Isaac, Rebekah and Jacob have that courage. They do what they must when the crucial choices must be made, and forgive each other. In their sunset years, we find Isaac and Rebekah blessed with peace in each other's arms. That all husbands and wives might be so blessed.
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First Sentence:
Rebekah's mother died a few days after she was born, but she never thought of this as something that happened in her childhood. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
holy writings
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God of Abraham, Lord God, Uncle Bethuel, Great Sea, Father Abraham
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