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The preservationist a novel  Cover Image CD Audiobook CD Audiobook

The preservationist [sound recording] : a novel / David Maine.

Maine, David, 1963- (Author). Bunch, Tyler. (Added Author). Hoopes, Wendy. (Added Author). Jones, Clayton Barclay. (Added Author). Jones, John Randolph. (Added Author). Lamia, Jenna. (Added Author). Pittu, David. (Added Author). Reed, Maggi-Meg. (Added Author). Rosenblat, Barbara. (Added Author).

Record details

  • ISBN: 1565118715 :
  • Physical Description: 6 sound discs (6.5 hr.) : digital ; 4 3/4 in.
  • Publisher: Minneapolis, MN : HighBridge, p2004.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Compact disc.
Unabridged.
Participant or Performer Note:
Read by Tyler Bunch, Wendy Hoopes, Clayton Barclay Jones, John Randolph Jones, Jenna Lamia, David Pittu, Maggi-Meg Reed, and Barbara Rosenblat.
Subject: Noah (Biblical figure) > Fiction.
Bible. O.T. Genesis > History of Biblical events > Fiction.
Animal welfare > Fiction.
Deluge > Fiction.
Noah's ark > Fiction.
Genre: Historical fiction.
Religious fiction.
Domestic fiction.

Holds

0 current holds with 0 total copies.


Syndetic Solutions - BookList Review for ISBN Number 1565118715
The Preservationist
The Preservationist
by Maine, David; Jones, Clayton Barclay; Jones, John Randolph; Hoopes, Wendy
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BookList Review

The Preservationist

Booklist


From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

Using just a few chapters from Genesis as his base, Maine fleshes out the story of Noah and his ark, making it both realistic--with touches of wry humor--and wondrous. Maine's Noe is an old man, implacable in believing in Yahweh's righteousness even while he is plagued by dreadful dreams. His story is told in the third person, in chapters alternating with first-person accounts by his family members--the unnamed wife and three sons and daughters-in-law: obedient Sem and wife Bera, irreverent Cham and wife Ilya, and exuberant Japheth and wife Mirn-- resulting in multiple views that add richness to the tale. These are full-dimensional characters, the men diligent and the women resourceful; particularly Ilya, but also Bera, show flashes of feminism in gathering animals (dangerous duty) and questioning what Yahweh has wrought. And there's no stinting the reality of almost 18 months on the ark: mucking out dung, confronting ferocious beasts, contending with numbing boredom and understandable spats, and enough rutting (in Maine's words) to make all three young women pregnant. A literary debut that makes a familiar story enthralling. --Michele Leber Copyright 2004 Booklist

Syndetic Solutions - Library Journal Review for ISBN Number 1565118715
The Preservationist
The Preservationist
by Maine, David; Jones, Clayton Barclay; Jones, John Randolph; Hoopes, Wendy
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Library Journal Review

The Preservationist

Library Journal


(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Maine draws on the story of Noah and the flood for a powerful and engaging first novel. Closely following the biblical text (which runs only two pages in most editions), he brings great depth, realism, and psychological subtlety to Noah (or "Noe" as he is called here), his family, and their heroic struggle to survive the flood. Their world is a mysterious and forbidding one, full of ancient cities, exotic beasts, and sin and evil. In one city, for example, the men and women "rut" together in the street, and the dead are left piled up, unburied. Maine is most interested in exploring how Noah's family responds to their cataclysmic ordeal, and he describes the daily rigors and shifting emotions among family members effectively. He also explores issues of faith, doubt, and the nature of God with resourcefulness and courage. Highly recommended.-Patrick Sullivan, Manchester Community Coll., Manchester, CT (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 1565118715
The Preservationist
The Preservationist
by Maine, David; Jones, Clayton Barclay; Jones, John Randolph; Hoopes, Wendy
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Publishers Weekly Review

The Preservationist

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Visitations from God are a mixed blessing for Noah and his family in Maine's spirited, imaginative debut. Noah (aka "Noe") may have pissed himself upon hearing God's instructions to build an arc, but he sets to the task without delay. He crosses the desert to buy lumber from giants; his eldest, Sem, fetches Cham, the son with shipbuilding skills; Sem's wife, Bera, and Cham's wife, Ilya, gather the animals; and Japheth, Noe's youngest, helps, too, in between goofing off and "rutting" with wife Mirn. And, of course, there's "the wife," 600-year-old Noe's once-teenage bride, who takes everything "Himself" (that's Noe, not God) dishes out with time-tested practicality. Wildly different in temperament, age and provenance, these characters, each telling part of the story, help create a brilliant kaleidoscopic analysis of the situation: the neighbors who ridicule Noe and clan; the inner doubts and shifting alliances; the varying feelings toward God, whose presence is always felt and sometimes resented. The flood comes as a relief from the wondering ("who is crazier: the crazy man or the people who put their faith in him?"), but hardship soon follows. Though the ending is already written, Maine enlivens every step toward it with small surprises. A story of faith and survival (think Life of Pi thousands of years earlier with a much larger cast of characters), this debut is a winner. Agent, Scott Hoffman. (July) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved


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