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Lion's Honey

The Myth of Samson

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
The Myth of Samson retold unabridged in exhilarating and lucid prose. The journey of a lonely and tortured soul who never found a true home in the world, who was uncomfortable in his very body and who, some might say, was the precursor of today's suicide bombers.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      This is the story of Samson as told in the Old Testament. Grossman goes farther than the Bible itself by bringing in the commentary of the Talmud and the explications of later rabbis. So we learn of the birth of Samson and his relationship with his parents. Grossman focuses mostly on Samson's self-destructive relationships with women and the Philistines. Mel Foster narrates this audiobook in even tones that reflect Grossman's serious approach to the text. Foster twists his tongue expertly around the Hebrew words, adding credibility to Grossman's analysis of Samson's conflicted character. M.B.K. (c) AudioFile 2006, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 20, 2006
      Samson, the biblical strongman whose strength lay in his long hair, has long been viewed as a hero. Before his birth, an angel told his mother that her child would be consecrated to God and save his people. But his is a strange and tragic story. Only in defeat, after his duplicitous lover Delilah cuts off his tresses and hands him over to his enemies, can he fulfill the prophecy and bring down the Philistine temple, killing himself and his captors. Acclaimed Israeli novelist Grossman (The Body
      ) revisits the story in Canongate's series the Myths. He views Samson as an impulsive, lonely, failed man. Grossman's consideration falls squarely into the Jewish tradition of biblical exegesis, imparting both psychological and literary meaning to the story. His mastery of the Hebrew allows for depths of consideration not available to anyone working with a translation. But his reading of Samson is oddly contradictory: on the one hand, he insists that Samson is a man controlled by outside forces; on the other, that deep psychological needs drive him to self-destructive behavior. In the end, Grossman refuses to entertain the most glaring possibility the myth opens up: that only in his failure can Samson succeed and fulfill his life's mission.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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