Why I Read This Book / My History With the Source Material
I had never heard of this book before, but on a recent trip back home, my mother was reading this book for her book club, and I found about about it from her.
My mother had also been familiar with the author, Geraldine Brooks, for a long time, and had enjoyed several of her other books.
Despite my mother's fondness for Geraldine Brooks, she ended up giving this particular book a mixed review. When she finally finished the book, she said that in retrospect she could probably have done without reading it. (I think she was a bit put off by some of the more graphic violent scenes in the book.)
But I was still intrigued enough by the book's premise that I ended up buying myself a copy before flying back to Vietnam.
The book is a novel based on the King David story. And I've always been fascinated by the King David story.
As a kid, I was always fascinated by Bible stories. And even now that I'm an agnostic, I remain fascinated by the Bible stories as stories. (As I've indicated on this blog before--here, here, here and here, for example.)
I have a complicated relationship with these stories, as I do with everything from childhood, because I was exposed to them before my critical thinking skills had fully developed. And so whenever I read these stories, I'm never fully viewing them through adult eyes. I'm also remembering the fascination they held for me as a child.
As a child, I was always fascinated by these brutal iron-age tales of blood and savagery. And I assumed everyone else would be as well.
But since then, I've meet several people who didn't grow up in Sunday School. And they never understand the fascination with these stories.
A couple years ago, I got into a long debate in a bar with a Scotsman. He had grown up in a secular house, and he couldn't understand why people were at all interested in the Bible stories. He was adamant that the stories in the Bible were less interesting than any other mythology. Why waste your time reading the Old Testament when you could read Homer?
I reflexively argued for the Old Testament stories, but as the conversation progressed I actually found that it was an uphill battle.
Have you read 1st and 2nd Kings lately? It's hard to argue that these are artistically the equal of the Greek mythological canon.
I've also discovered that in Asia (or at least Japan, Cambodia, and Vietnam, where I've lived) there is absolutely zero interest in the Old Testament Bible stories among the native population.
But for anyone who grew up with these stories in Sunday School, they are fascinating.
For one thing, they were the most violent and brutal stories that I was exposed to at the time.
And they were also an insight in to what I believed was mankind's earliest history. (I now know better--I now know these stories were probably composed--or at least compiled--in the 4th century B.C., and that they are not actually mankind's earliest surviving historical record. But at the time I believed it was the only window we had back to the dawn of history.)
As a child, I went to Church on Sundays and Wednesday night. And I also went to a Christian school where we studied the Bible for one period every day.
From Kindergarten to 2nd grade, the teacher would just tell us these stories in language that little kids could understand. From 3rd grade on, we got our own Bibles, and would read these stories directly.
Also, from 7th grade through 10th grade, I embarked on a reading project of my own to read a chapter of the Bible every night until I had read the whole thing cover to cover.
But perhaps what sticks in my mind most vividly is not the actual text of the Bible itself, but The David C Cook comics version.
Anyone else remember this? It was distributed as Pix Magazine (W), given free of charge to kids attending Sunday School. Every issue featured a comic book retelling of a Bible story.
The comics were also collected in one binding and sold as The Picture Bible (A). But The Picture Bible is actually a heavily abridged version of the comic book series. (I assume because it would have been physically impossible to put the whole series under one binding).
The weekly Pix comics were actually surprisingly thorough in their trudge through the Old Testament histories. If memory serves, they omitted all the sexual violence from the Bible, and they omitted the disembowelings. But they left in pretty much all the other details.
I loved Pix as a kid. (It's amazing how kids will read anything if you put it in a comic book form, although as I mentioned above I was predisposed to be interested in these stories anyway.) And many of these Bible stories I remember better from their visual Pix form than from the actual text of the Old Testament. (One example from many: the way David conquered Jerusalem by sneaking his men in through the underground water shafts--the underground assault is only vaguely alluded in the actual Bible itself, so it would never have caught my attention if Pix hadn't illustrated it.)
Another reason the King David story stuck in my mind is because it is tonally dissonant from the rest of the Old Testament, which used to confuse me as a kid.
Most of the Old Testament history is presented as a simple morality tale. Serve God, and get rewarded. Disobey God, and get punished.
The King David Story loses this simple morality as we delve into political machinations in which there are no clear good guys and bad guys.
I remember how confused I was as a kid when Abner killed Asahel. Asahel was one of David's men, fighting for David's cause. Wasn't God supposed to be protecting him?
What about when Saul's grandchildren were killed by the Gibeonites? Who was supposed to be the good guy here?
The character of Joab fascinated and confused me. He was clearly a brutal man, and yet he was someone that David needed, and who did most of David's fighting. But then after all that, Joab gets unceremoniously killed off by King Solomon in the 2nd Chapter of 1st Kings.
Was Joab one of the good guys or not? The Bible didn't seem to indicate, which confused me because ordinarily the Bible isn't shy about editorializing.
One day I asked my 5th grade Bible teacher, "Looking at his whole life, was Joab a good person or a bad person?" I remember she didn't give me a clear answer, but she did later mention to my parents that I was asking a lot of good questions in Bible class.
Since I've stopped going to Sunday School, these stories have somewhat faded to the back of my mind over the years.
But, like a lot of the stories I remember from childhood, they'll occasionally come back to me at odd moments. And I'll have one of those "Wait, was that real?" type moments.
Did David actually serve the Philistine king for a period?
Was the Ark of the Covenant actually captured by the Philistines?
Did Prince Jonathon defeat a whole detachment of Philistines just by himself?
And then I'll go back to the Bible and look these stories up to make sure I wasn't imagining them.
So even though I've stopped going to Church long ago, the stories have stayed in my imagination.
In fact, as I mentioned back in 2013, it was precisely my fascination with the King David saga that caused me to seek out books and podcasts related to Biblical history.
At the time I was also looking for other books on the King David story, but as I was living in Cambodia, I had trouble finding what I wanted.
So when my mother mentioned this book to me, it sounded right up my alley.
Historicity of the Original Source Material
Some of this commentary will inform my critique of the novel. Some of this is me just going off on my areas of interest. Feel free to skip over this.
Biblical scholars have identified 4 sources for the historical sections of the Old Testament: The Yawist Source (W), the Elohist Source (W) the Priestly Source (W) and the Deuteronomistic Historian (W).
The Deuteronomistic Historian was also the editor of this material.
Writing after the exile (about the 4th Century BC), the Deuteronomistic Historian was trying to figure out why God had allowed the Kingdoms of Israel and Judah to be conquered by the Assyrians and Babylonians.
His thesis was simple--God had allowed them to be conquered because they hadn't followed God's commandments. (Footnote: This is actually a pretty common occurrence in world history. Often when a nation suffers some kind of disaster or military defeat, they conclude it is because God has become angry with them, and they need to be more pious about observing religion. I was recently reading a history of ancient Thailand which linked a revival of devout Buddhism to the destruction of Thailand's capital.)
The book of Deuteronomy, written by the Deuteronomistic Historian, sets out the thesis clearly. In Deuteronomy, God makes a Covenant with the people of Israel. If you follow my commandments, and you will be victorious over your enemies. If you abandon my commandments, disaster will strike you.
And then, sure enough, the rest of the historical books follow this thesis. All through the conquest of Canaan, the period of the judges, and the period of the two kingdoms, every time the Israelites follow God, they are victorious. Every time they worship false gods and idols, they are defeated by their enemies.
This polemic, and the consistency with which it's applied throughout the Old Testament histories, makes the King David story all the more interesting because it is an exception.
In the King David story, the Deuteronomistic Historian takes an unusual detour from his morality tale to talk about the political squabbles and civil wars of ancient Israel.
The moralizing tone will often drop, and instead the emphasis shifts to realpolitik. (During the civil war between King David and the remnants of the house of Saul, it's not clear who God is favoring. God does not always grant victory to David's army, and both sides fight themselves to a standstill at the battle of Gibeon.)
There's another oddity in the King David Story.
Much of the Old Testament, particularly the later prophets, look back on King David's reign as the golden age of Israel. And David himself is frequently praised as Israel's greatest king.
But if you actually read 2nd Samuel, King David was a terrible king. He was weak, he couldn't make decisions, he couldn't control his generals, he couldn't control his sons, and there were multiple popular uprisings against him during his reign, which indicated he wasn't all that popular with the people.
For both of these reasons, it's hypothesized that the narrative of 2nd Samuel came from a separate source that the Deuteronomistic Historian inserted into his history.
Because this source paints a very flawed picture of King David, it is assumed that this source is roughly contemporary with the actual reign of King David, and does not come from the later period when King David was being mythologized
And because the story of King David shows intimate knowledge of the quarrels of King David's court (quarrels among King David's sons and nephews), it is hypothesized it might be written by someone who was actually an eye-witness at the court, and is therefore called the Court History.
This is the view of even some atheist scholars like Robin Lane Fox who argues that the King David story must have been authentic, because there's no way this story could have come from the later period when David was being mythologized.
To quote from Robin Lane Fox himself:
This section of the royal narrative is unlike any other. It contains no miracles but is full of intrigues and devious trick: women are prominent in the action. It reports the private dialogues of persons of high rank; it tells an interconnected story, from the wars against Ammon to the affair of David and Bathsheba, the deaths of two of David’s sons and the maneuvers to succeed to his throne…During these twenty years or so of David’s reign, the main focus is on events at court among David’s friends and enemies. As a result, D’s source for these chapters has been ascribed as a court history, the work of a near-contemporary with access to court secrets….The scope, nature and date of this source are naturally strongly contested (we have to infer them) but there is no mistaking its difference of tone: its picture of King David is not unduly flattering (he commits adultery with Bathsheba and kills off her husband Uriah). On the strength of it, this source has been classed as an ‘anti-history’ and dated late during the Exile in reaction to others’ idealizing of David, the head of the royal messianic line. Yet there is no trace anywhere else of such ‘anti-history’; the later our sources, the more they idealize David the king. Rather, the work’s detail, tone and focus point to a text which was written much earlier: how else did the author know so much court detail and geography, tell it relatively straight? (Robin Lane Fox, The Unauthorized Version p. 188).(Note: D=the Deuteronomistic Historian)
This is also the view that Geraldine Brooks takes. Although she doesn't waste a lot of time defending her view, she does mention briefly in her afterward: "...I tend to agree with Duff Cooper, who concluded that David must actually have existed, for no people would invent such a flawed figure for a national hero" (Author's Afterward, p.333)
On the same page, Geraldine Brooks writes: "David is the first man in literature whose story is told in detail from early childhood to extreme old age. Some scholars have called this biography the oldest piece of history writing, predating Herodotus by at least half a millennium" (Author's Afterward, p.333).
This claim is controversial--not everyone agrees that the King David story is based on an authentic court history from 1000 B.C.--but it is at least an intriguing possibility, and one that adds potential interest to the King David story.
But there are also arguments that the King David story is not historical.
For one thing, the archaeological evidence does not appear to support the size and scope of David's Kingdom as reported in 2nd Samuel.
King David, if he existed in Israel in 1000 BC, was much more likely to be a tribal chieftain than the king of a united Israelite kingdom.
Of course this need not disprove everything in King David story. It's possible that the basis of the story is still true, even if the scope of it is exaggerated.
But there's another factor to consider as well. Geraldine Brooks and Robin Lane Fox both seem to be basing their arguments on the tone of the story--no people would invent such a flawed king as a mythological national symbol, so therefore King David must be historical.
But in fact, the story of "the once great king who grows weak" pops up in mythology all the time, even among national symbols.
The story of King Arthur is very similar to the story of King David. Just like King David, King Arthur starts out as a strong king, but as he grows old he loses control of his kingdom. And just like King David, King Arthur also faces challenges from his sons and nephews.
King Lear is another figure.
Many of the ancient Greek tragedies revolve around heroes who perform great deeds when they are younger, but suffer tragedies in old age. (There's an interesting article here King David and Oedipus Rex which points out the many similarities between the King David story and Greek tragedies.)
Which brings me to my next point
Style and Themes of the Original Source Material
Within the long long historical narrative of the Old Testament, the King David story is the closest thing the Old Testament has to an epic.
It's got all the elements for a great Greek Epic, or a Shakespearean tragedy: Jonathon's conflict between his duty to his parents and his love for his friend, David's conflict between his love for Saul's family and his destiny to overthrow Saul, David's heartbreak as his own sons turn against him, plus lots of surprise assassinations, murders, and strange political alliances.
...Or at least, The King David Story would have all these elements, if it had been told by a better narrator.
As it is, the Old Testament narrator keeps such a distance from the story that it makes it hard for the reader to become invested in any of these characters.
Christine Hayes in her lectures on the Old Testament describes the style of the Biblical Narrative perfectly. She is describing the story of Abraham and Isaac, but actually the same comments could be made about much of the King David story, so I'll just quote her at length. (Full text here).
This week's assigned reading includes selections from Robert Alter's book, The Art of Biblical Narrative, which I heartily recommend to read in its entirety. Alter describes the extreme economy of biblical narrative, economy in the description of physical settings and character as well as speech. Rarely does the narrator comment on or explain a character's actions or thoughts or motives. There's only the barest minimum of dialogue. And on the few occasions that the Bible will violate this principle of verbal economy — for example if two characters converse at length — you can be sure it's significant. You'll want to pay extra attention. The biblical narrator's concealing of details and the motives of the characters, God and Abraham and Isaac, leads to ambiguity, and the possibility of very many interpretations. And that is a striking characteristic of biblical prose: its suppression of detail, its terse, laconic style. That makes the little that is given so powerful, so "fraught with background" to use the phrase of Eric Auerbach, whose article you are also to read this week. Auerbach contrasts the literary style of Homer with the biblical writer's style specifically in connection with the story of Genesis 22.
The ambiguities and the indeterminacy of this story make it one of the most interpreted texts of all time. Why is God testing Abraham? Does God really desire such a sacrifice? What is Abraham thinking and feeling as he walks — for three days, already — walks with his son, bearing the wood and the fire for the sacrifice? Does he fully intend to obey this command, to annul the covenantal promise with his own hand? Or does he trust in God to intervene? Or is this a paradox of faith? Does Abraham intend faithfully to obey, all the while trusting faithfully that God's promise will nevertheless be fulfilled? What's Isaac thinking? Does he understand what is happening? How old is he? Is this a little boy or a grown man? Is he prepared to obey? He sees the wood and the firestone in his father's hand. Clearly a sacrifice is planned. He's got three days to figure that out. He asks his father: Where is the sheep for the burnt offering? Does he know the answer even as he asks? Does he hear the double entendre in his father's very simple and solemn reply, which in the unpunctuated Hebrew might be read, "The lord will provide the sheep for the offering: my son." Does he struggle when he's bound? Does he acquiesce?
The beauty of the narrative is its sheer economy. It offers so little that we as readers are forced to imagine the innumerable possibilities. We play out the drama in countless ways, with an Abraham who's reluctant and an Isaac who's ignorant. Or an Abraham who's eager to serve his God to the point of sacrificing his own son, and an Isaac who willingly bares his neck to the knife.As Christine Hayes points out, the beauty of the Biblical narrative is that the details are so sparse that multiple interpretations are possible. But this is also its frustration as well. Reading through the bare text of 1st and 2nd Samuel, the reader is often left confused about how they are supposed to feel about the events.
The other problem with the original source material is that everything happens twice.
Apparently the Deuteronomistic Historian had access to multiple accounts of the same story when he edited together the Old Testament histories. Rather than choosing one account and throwing the other account away, he decided to preserve both accounts.
This is not unique to the King David stories--it's all the way through the Old Testament. (There are two different creations accounts in the book of Genesis, for example).
But it's particularly noticeable with the King David story.
King Saul loses God's favor twice.
David is presented to King Saul twice.
Saul turns against David twice.
David flees twice.
David finds King Saul sleeping and spares Saul's life twice.
David is presented to the Philistine King twice.
And as Christine Hayes points out, Goliath is even killed twice in two different battles.
This need not be a negative, and indeed literature professor Grant Voth sees this as a fascinating literary technique. The reader is presented with two different versions of the same story, but with different themes and morals in each. For example, in the story of how King David came to be part of Saul's court, there are two conflicting stories. In one story, David is completely passive, and God does all the work. In the other story, God is largely absent from the story, and David comes to Saul's attention through his own action and agency.
Which story is true? While, that depends on the reader, and whatever themes and values the reader wants to emphasize. It's kind of like the first "Choose Your Own Adventure" book in world literature. (See Grant Voth's lecture on the Old Testament HERE).
Grant Voth's perspective provides a fascinating way to read the Old Testament, but this was not the way we were taught to read it in Sunday School.
We were taught that every word of the Bible was true, which meant that we had to interpret the story not as a series of choices, but just as a very repetitive story in which everything kept happening multiple times (for some reason) which completely kills the forward momentum of the narrative.
The Challenge
Despite my Scottish friend's certainty that the Bible can't compare to Greek mythology, one gets the feeling that there's an epic story somewhere in the King David narrative--one that I think could compare with the Greek epics.
The issue is all the problems with the source material mentioned above.
But then, all the more reason for a modern day novelist to come along and rescue the basic narrative from the source material--flesh out the parts that need fleshing out, and smooth over all the internal contradictions and repetitions.
Indeed, it's slightly surprising that more novelists haven't taken on the King David material.
Geraldine Brooks is not exactly the first novelist to attempt this story (Wikipedia has a list of all the fiction written about King David), but even so the list is much shorter than it should be given the inherent appeal of this material.
But I suppose that being incorporated into the Bible is a double-edged sword. On the one hand, every Sunday School student knows the stories. But on the other hand, the source material has to be treated with such reverence that no one is allowed to play with it.
(If King David hadn't been part of the Bible, then I suspect that he might have gone the way of King Arthur--the story would have been retold hundreds of times, and each successive author would add in new complications and plot details, until the story would have become truly rich and epic. But alas, this was never allowed to happen.)
There's another problem as well--there is a lot of brutal stuff in the source material. King David massacred a lot of people, and the original source material is unapologetic about it.
An honest author probably can't omit these details, and yet to make these brutal Iron Age stories relatable to a modern day reader is always going to be an uphill battle.
The Review
Despite my fascination with the source material, it has to be admitted that (for all the reasons mentioned above) it was always going to be an uphill battle to make a coherent novel out of this that would be relatable to modern day readers.
I think Geraldine Brooks does the best that can be done given the material she has.
At its best, the book does a good job of fleshing out the stories that are only vaguely hinted at in the Biblical narrative.
For example, take this brief passage from 2 Samuel 21:
15 Once again there was a battle between the Philistines and Israel. David went down with his men to fight against the Philistines, and he became exhausted. 16 And Ishbi-Benob, one of the descendants of Rapha, whose bronze spearhead weighed three hundred shekels and who was armed with a new sword, said he would kill David. 17 But Abishai son of Zeruiah came to David’s rescue; he struck the Philistine down and killed him. Then David’s men swore to him, saying, “Never again will you go out with us to battle, so that the lamp of Israel will not be extinguished.”
There's not really much of a story here, but there could be.
Homer--who may have been a contemporary of the author of the King David narrative (see above)--would never have told the story like this. Homer would have fleshed out all the details of the battle.
Geraldine Brooks takes this brief passage as the opening for her novel, and fully fleshes it out. She describes the battle, how King David was fighting in it, how King David was almost killed by a Philistine spear thrower, and how Abishai jumped in front of the spear to save King David's life at the last minute.
And we also see all of the emotions that were absent from the original Biblical text--how angry King David was at Abishai for saving his life, and making him look weak in front of his men. How King David hated the decision that he must never go out into battle again, and how on the next campaign he raged in his palace when he was left behind while Joab led his men.
At its best, the novel takes all these little passages from the Bible (passages that you might just skip over and not even notice when reading the Old Testament because they seem like minor details) and fleshes them out into proper stories.
I'll give a couple more examples.
As mentioned above, the conquest of Jerusalem via the water shafts is barely even mentioned in the actual Bible itself:
The king and his men marched to Jerusalem to attack the Jebusites, who lived there. The Jebusites said to David, “You will not get in here; even the blind and the lame can ward you off.” They thought, “David cannot get in here.” 7 Nevertheless, David captured the fortress of Zion—which is the City of David. 8 On that day David had said, “Anyone who conquers the Jebusites will have to use the water shaft to reach those ‘lame and blind’ who are David’s enemies.” That is why they say, “The ‘blind and lame’ will not enter the palace.”
But what were these water shafts? Where were they? How did they work? How did King David find out about them? Why weren't they guarded by the Jebusites? Where did the soldiers enter them? What was it like going through them? What did the soldiers do once they got through the water shafts?
All of these questions find answers in Geraldine Brooks's story.
And there are many, many more instances of this--throughout the Old Testament, there are all sorts of bizarre little details that are not fully explained.
Who was this prophet Nathan, and where did he come from?
Why did Jesse appear to forget he had a younger son when Samuel came to his house?
How come David and Jonathon had such a deep attachment to each other? What was really going on here?
How did Michal feel about being separated from her husband and brought back to David?
Why did her husband follow her?
Why did King David allow Joab to live after Joab killed Abner?
Why did David get so angry at Michal when she criticized him for dancing?
Why did David deliver up Saul's descendants to the Gibeonites?
Whatever happened to Tamar after Amnon rapped her?
Why didn't King David punish Amnon?
Why did Amnon go to Absalom's feast when he knew Absalom hated him?
Why did Jonadab appear to have Amnon's confidence in one part of the narrative, and Absalom's confidence in another part? Whose side was he on really?
Why did Joab plead for Absalom's return?
Why did Absalom rebel against his father?
Why did Joab ignore the order he was given not to kill Absalom?
Why did King David appoint Amasa (the general of the rebel forces) as the commander of his own forces?
Why did Joab kill Amasa?
Why did the prophet Nathan support Solomon's claim to the throne instead of that of the older brother Adonijah?
All these and more are questions that are left unanswered in the Biblical text, but find answers in Geraldine Brooks's narrative.
I enjoyed this book best when it was attempting to make sense out of the Biblical King David stories.
There are also some references to the Jewish apocrypha. (The mother of David is never named in the Bible, but Geraldine Brooks gets her name Nitzevet from the Jewish sources).
I found it slightly less interesting when the book went off on its own original tangents.
For example the prophet Nathan is given a complete backstory in this book--one that I think Geraldine Brooks is just making up out of whole cloth (unless it comes from the Jewish apocrypha?)
There's also a backstory to David's birth and childhood which I assume is also Geraldine Brooks's own invention.
These parts weren't badly written, but I was much more interested once we got to the real meat of the Biblical stories (around page 50).
The book also jumps around in time a lot.
The book is told from the perspective of the prophet Nathan.
It starts out during the reign of King Solomon when Nathan is an old man. Then it jumps back in time to when King David is on the throne and angry about not being allowed to go on military campaigns. Then flashes back to the battle in which Abishai saved King David's life. Then Nathan is instructed to write King David's biography, and we have various interviews with people in which the backstory is told, interspersed with Nathan's own flashbacks, interspersed with the narrative of David and Bathsheba...et cetera.
If you know your Old Testament stories well, you'll be able to follow all the jumps in time without any problems. But I worry that readers not familiar with the Bible will be completely confused.
Lastly, there's the problem of the brutality inherent in the source material.
In 1st Samuel 27, David has come under the protection of the Philistine king.
6 So on that day Achish gave him Ziklag, and it has belonged to the kings of Judah ever since. 7 David lived in Philistine territory a year and four months.As with a lot of the stuff in the King David narrative, the morality of this is ambiguous even within the context of its source material.
8 Now David and his men went up and raided the Geshurites, the Girzites and the Amalekites. (From ancient times these peoples had lived in the land extending to Shur and Egypt.) 9 Whenever David attacked an area, he did not leave a man or woman alive, but took sheep and cattle, donkeys and camels, and clothes. Then he returned to Achish.
10 When Achish asked, “Where did you go raiding today?” David would say, “Against the Negev of Judah” or “Against the Negev of Jerahmeel” or “Against the Negev of the Kenites.” 11 He did not leave a man or woman alive to be brought to Gath, for he thought, “They might inform on us and say, ‘This is what David did.’” And such was his practice as long as he lived in Philistine territory. 12 Achish trusted David and said to himself, “He has become so obnoxious to his people, the Israelites, that he will be my servant for life.”
Several times throughout the Old Testament, God instructs the Israelites to kill all the Amalekites. So possibly David is massacring the Amalekites out of zeal for God. But based on the context, it appears that these particular massacres are not sanctioned directly by God, and are just a way for David to cover up his lies to the Philistine King.
A novelist writing about King David must decide what to do with this material. It could easily have been omitted, but Geraldine Brooks makes the decision to leave it in, and to her credit, I think that is the only honest way to deal with this material.
Told from the 1st person perspective of Nathan, Geraldine Brooks writes the event like this:
These lies had a cascade of ill consequences. To conceal our duplicity, David commanded that we leave no one alive in the sacked villages to tell what we had done. These were ugly, cruel, asymmetric fights. We were well-armed and seasoned soldiers; the villagers were simple herdsmen and farmers, often defending themselves only with scythes and hoes.On one searing day I fought beside David as he cut down an man who had confronted him bravely--the village headman, so it seemed. There was something in the decisive, almost casual way that David slew him, something in the way the man fell, his face registering surprise rather than fear or panic--and then I saw the boy, struggling in the grip of his howling mother. A boy of the age I had been when David took my father's life with just the same detachment.Bile rose in my throat. Despair, like a smothering fall of earth, crushed me. As David turned and moved toward the boy and his mother, I cried out,"Don't do it!"David turned for a moment, his expression perplexed, but then he moved like a lynx and in two sword thrusts dispatched the woman and her child. He turned back to me and lifted his shoulders. "It was necessary. We can't leave any alive. You know that." And then he turned in search of his next kill.I stood there in the swirling dust, staring at the body of the boy. He'd fallen against his mother, his hand open on the dirt as if reaching for her face. The sobs that convulsed me were unstoppable, a spring in spate. I could barely breathe. These were the tears I'd never shed for my own father, the grief that vision's fierce grip had torn away from me. I went and knelt by the boy, my hand on his head. Others of our band passed me. Some paused a moment to see if I was injured. After a summing look, they moved on to the chore of killing until everyone was dead. (p.90-91)It is to Geraldine Brooks's credit that she doesn't shy away from these details, and forces the reader to confront the brutality of these Bible stories with all their gory details.
But the problem, from a storytelling standpoint, is that after this passage I completely lost any sympathy with David.
What do I care about David after this? Later in the book, Geraldine Brooks goes on to describe King David's beautiful singing voice, his wonderful songs, his golden locks of hair. But all this couldn't make this character regain my sympathy. Later, when David suffered his own misfortunes, and grieved over Jonathon's death, I still couldn't sympathize with him
Maybe in the Iron Age you could massacre whole villages, and still be regarded as a great poet with a soft heart.
But in the modern age, you can't make these minor details. You can't say, "... oh, and by the way, he also massacred whole villages." Once you describe him massacring whole villages, that then becomes the story.
I'm told Pol Pot wrote beautiful poetry, but I don't care.
I suspect this is the reason that Geraldine Brooks made Nathan the narrator of this book--so that the reader could have someone they identified with as the focal point of the story instead of King David.
But Nathan is so sycophantic towards David that I was even more repulsed by him. How could Nathan even talk about David's beautiful hair and lovely singing voice when Nathan has seen these massacres?
Despite this revulsion, however, I kept reading, and when the story got into the so-called Succession Narrative, I got hooked again.
(Most of 2nd Samuel focuses on the infighting between King David's nephews and sons, in what Biblical scholars have have named the Succession Narrative).
Despite the fact that there aren't many likable characters in the succession narrative, the constant plotting, betrayals, and backstabbings can't help but make for interesting drama. (I suppose it's like watching HBO dramas like The Sopranos. Even though you know all the characters are bad, you still get hooked on the drama of all their plotting against each other).
In the end, there was enough juicy drama in 2nd Samuel, and Geraldine Brooks told it with enough skill, that it completely held my interest.
Other Notes
* I'm including this in my list of historical fiction books. Even though I've listed above all the reasons why the King David story may not be historical, at the very least it's still in debate. And so the story gets the benefit of the doubt, and this book gets counted as historical fiction.
* In 2013, I included the King David story on my list of historical dramas I would like to see get turned into TV shows.
Since then, someone at ABC actually took me up on my idea, and in 2016 released a TV show called Of Kings and Prophets. But since the show wasn't a big hit, and since I was living abroad, I didn't even know it existed until it had been cancelled.
Apparently the show was a failure.
Nevertheless, I still believe there's the potential for a good television drama buried somewhere in this story, if someone knows how to dig it out.
Video Reviews
Video reviews here and here and embedded below
Part 1
Part 2
Link of the Day
Noam Chomsky: The War on Iraq
6 comments:
Your Scottish interlocutor has some unchecked presumptions that would be interesting to explore. 1) Some stories are superior to others 2) so why should we bother ourselves with the stories we've deemed inferior?
One could argue that Brooks is a superior story teller to the scribes of 1&2 Samuel, given her capacity for (maybe) believable dialogue, thought-life, etc. So why are readers likely to forget her within a generation, but just as likely to parse over the scriptural account? And why are there tribal tendencies to integrate the stories of David to a degree that supersedes the sort of discussion that surrounds Homer's Odyssey or Gilgamesh?
But David C. Cook -- truly a scribe for the ages!
Ah right, did you grow up on those Pix comics as well then?
If you could have been a fly on the wall during that bar-room conversation, you'd have been proud of me. I argued all those same points against my Scottish interlocuter.
But since then I've started to wonder a bit.
Here is a question I've been pondering:
1) Have you ever met anyone outside of the faith-based community (i.e. someone who didn't grow up with these stories) that was at all interested in these stories, or thought there was any literary value in them as stories?
My own anecdotal experience is telling me "no", but I'd be open to correction on this if you've had different experiences.
I personally am still obsessed with these stories (as the above post probably makes clear) but then I don't count because I grew up with them.
David C. Cook was just getting rolling when I was a kid in the 70s. Tullus was a character who inspired much contemplation. After that Cook took a crack at the testaments and lost me (I was too old and too familiar with the good stuff he was leaving out. Crumb's approach is vastly more engaging, in contrast.)
As for cross-cultural interest, never in pubs, and usually only among similarly educated folk who are also taking a stab at sorting it all out. Most of us, and perhaps I presume but I include you here, would assert that whether or not we publicly affirm the intrinsic value of these stories, they follow us and express themselves in the narratives we tell as well as the dramas we initiate just by living and negotiating the expression of our primal urges. A 20-year-old son of a Mexican-Mennonite gangster will still live out the broad strokes of Oedipus Rex, even if he knows nothing of the play. Or, if his Oma somehow gets through to him, he might live out the Jewish subversion of Oedipus as embodied in the story of Joseph.
Hmmm... I never thought about Joseph being a subversion of Oedipus. I thought about it for a while though, and I think I figured it out---abandoned as a child, meeting your father in a foreign land under a new identity.
Have you been listening to this series?
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL22J3VaeABQD_IZs7y60I3lUrrFTzkpat
I haven't listened to the whole thing yet myself, but based on just listening to a couple episodes, it sounds very similar to what you're saying.
I knew he was working on the series but wasn't aware just how far he'd come in completing it. I'll definitely give it a closer look/listen.
Actually, I first encountered the Joseph/Oedipus comparison/contrast in René Girard (episode 2, I think). I've been digging Girard in a big way this past year.
I don't think it's done yet, but there is 26 hours plus of material online already, so more than enough to tuck into if you're interested.
But as I said, I have to admit I've only given it a cursory check myself. (Just clicked on a couple episodes and listened to snippets of them.)
Thanks for the Girard links. That looks interesting as well.
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