Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Kiki's been surfing the web





Kiki seems to like what Eva Etzioni-Halevy wrote about The Triumph of Deborah, which I am currently reading.  I can hardly wait to get to the part I put into a teaser last week.  Do you think I should hide the book from Kiki when I'm not actually reading it?

Monday, November 23, 2009

Question of the week ~ David Letterman


David Letterman, host of The Late Show, makes over $30 million per year, while the average schoolteacher makes less than $55,000. Is that just?  Answer yes or no, and then please tell us why.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Guest post by the author ~ The Triumph of Deborah

Eva Etzioni-Halevy has written three novels about women in the Bible:  The Song of Hannah, The Garden of Ruth, and The Triumph of Deborah, the most recent.  Welcome, Eva!
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What attracted me to write about the Biblical figure Deborah:
An Amazing Story, A Shining Role Model, and a Leader to Peace

Sometimes I am asked what made me decide to write a novel about the biblical figure Deborah and warrior Barak. Deborah was a religious and national leader and a chief justice all wrapped in one, arguably the most eminent woman in the Bible (Old Testament), and Barak was a renowned warrior. This in itself is enough of a reason to write about them.

An Amazing Story

In addition, the Scripture (Judges 4-5) tells the most amazing story about them.

In ancient Israel, war is looming. Leader Deborah orders warrior Barak to launch a strike against the neighboring Canaanites, who enjoy military superiority and threaten Israel with destruction.

The Bible tells us that when Deborah sent Barak to go out to war against the Canaanites, he did something rather unusual: he demanded that she accompany him to the battlefield. Over three thousand years ago -- a woman in the battlefield? Very strange. As I read the story over and over again, I asked myself: why did he really want her there?

The Scripture further recounts that she ended up going with him not merely into battle but to his hometown as well. Yet she was a married woman and a mother, and there is nothing to indicate that husband Lapidoth accompanied her.

I began asking myself: what did her husband have to say to that excursion? What would ANY husband say if his wife suddenly went off to distant parts with another man, leaving him to do the babysitting? It makes sense that this created marital difficulties for them. Would they be able to overcome those problems? Further, what transpired between Deborah and Barak when they were together with no husband in sight?

These were the aspects of Deborah and Barak and their story in the Bible that I found most compelling, and they prompted me to write the novel, in which I used my imagination and my identification to answer these questions.

According to the biblical story, against all odds Bark succeeds and returns triumphantly. The Bible also says: "Barak, capture your captives!" In my novel, those captives are (among others) two daughters of the defeated Canaanite king and a tumultuous love triangle develops between Barak and the two princesses, while Deborah becomes part of the turmoil.

I wrote the story in a manner that is faithful to the Scripture, but makes for light, entertaining reading and can be enjoyed by Bible lovers, but no less by people who have never held a Bible in their hands.

Beyond writing about Deborah because her story in the Bible may serve as the basis of an intriguing plot, I also chose her as my heroine because I believe that women of today can find inspiration in her.

A Shining Role Model

Based on the account in the Bible and on my novel, which enlarges on it, Deborah may serve as a splendid role model for contemporary women.

Deborah lived in a male dominated society, where women were downtrodden: they had few legal rights and their position in the family was deplorable. Nonetheless she succeeded in attaining an outstanding position as an exalted leader, and was highly revered by both men and women.

Much has changed since then, but the circumstances for women are still difficult, although in a different way. Legally, the situation of women has improved out of all recognition. At the same time, today's women face difficulties in their lives, which are far from negligible. One of them is that of combining partnership with a man and motherhood with a career.

The lesson that women today can learn from Deborah is: I can do it. No matter how difficult the circumstances, I can overcome them. That does not mean that all women must become political leaders, or judges. Rather, the message in the Bible and in my Bible-based novel is that the limiting circumstances did not deter her from asserting herself and doing what SHE wanted to do. Present day women seeking to build lives of their own may derive inspiration from her in whatever THEY want to do, in whatever field they choose to do so.

A Leader to Peace

The Scripture concludes Deborah and Barak's story with the following verse: "And the land was at peace for forty years." So, as Deborah was the one who instigated war, she must also have been the one who brought about peace.

In my novel, I show how Deborah, aided by Barak and others, groped her way toward the greatest triumph of her life: the attainment of peace.

Here, too, there is a lesson for our times: Based on the Bible, my novel shows that a woman can be a brilliant national leader. She can lead her nation to war when necessary, and to peace when this becomes possible. The world is just about due for such a woman-leader.

Eva Etzioni-Halevy
www.women-in-the-bible.com

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 (Bonnie's note:  See the teaser from this book that I posted on Thursday.)

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Women's Studies



When I decided to do the Women Unbound reading challenge, I needed to pick books related to feminism.  I started making a list and checking it twice -- well, probably checking it a half dozen times before I wrote about my eight choices (though I reserve the right to change my mind -- again).  This is my longer list, if anyone needs good ideas for books that fall under the "women's studies" label.

FICTION
  • Diary of a Mad Housewife ~ by Sue Kaufman, 1967
  • The Triumph of Deborah ~ by Eva Etzioni-Halevy, 2008
  • Evensong ~ by Gail Godwin, 1999
  • The Camel Bookmobile ~ by Masha Hamilton, 2007
  • Staircase of a Thousand Steps ~ by Masha Hamilton, 2007
  • The Secret School ~ by Avi, 2001
  • One Thousand White Women ~ by Jim Fergus, 1998
  • The Red Tent ~ by Anita Diamant, 1997
  • Beachcombing for a Shipwrecked God ~ by Joe Coomer, 1995
  • Herland ~ by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, 1915
  • The Secret Life of Bees ~ by Sue Monk Kidd, 2002
  • The Pull of the Moon ~ by Elizabeth Berg, 1996
  • Prodigal Summer ~ by Barbara Kingsolver, 2000
  • Possessing the Secret of Joy ~ by Alice Walker, 1992
  • Mrs. Dalloway ~ by Virginia Woolf, 1925
  • The Hours ~ by Michael Cunningham, 1998
  • The Left Hand of Darkness ~ by Ursula K. Le Guin, 1969
  • Rashi's Daughters: Joheved ~ by Maggie Anton, 2005
  • Their Eyes Were Watching God ~ by Zora Neale Hurston, 1937
  • The Awakening ~ by Kate Chopin, 1899
  • The Women's Room ~ by Marilyn French, 1977
  • Looking for Salvation at the Dairy Queen ~ by Susan Gregg Gilmore, 2008
  • Some Days There's Pie ~ by Catherine Landis, 2002
  • The Penelopiad ~ by Margaret Atwood, 2005
  • Ahab's Wife ~  by Sena Jeter Naslund, 1999
  • A Thousand Acres ~ by Jane Smiley, 1991
NONFICTION
  • Cherokee Women ~ by Theda Perdue, 1998
  • Why Women Should Rule the World ~ by Dee Dee Myers, 2008
  • Mrs. Man ~ by Una Stannard, 1977
  • The Feminine Mystique ~ by Betty Friedan, 1963
  • Women's Ways of Knowing ~ by Mary Field Belenky, et al, 1986
  • In a Different Voice ~ by Carol Gilligan, 1982, 1993
  • Dance of the Dissident Daughter ~ by Sue Monk Kidd, 1996
  • GirlDrive: Criss-Crossing America, Redefining Feminism ~ Nona Willis Aronowitz and Emma Bee Bernstein, 2009
  • The Boundaries of Her Body: A History of Women's Rights in America ~ by Debran Rowland, 2004
  • Feminism: The Essential Historical Writings ~ edited by Miriam Schneir, 1972
  • We Are Our Mother's Daughters ~ by Cokie Roberts, 1998
  • Founding Mothers: The Women Who Raised Our Nation ~ by Cokie Roberts, 2004
  • The Silent Passage: Menopause ~ by Gail Sheehy, 1992
  • Eleanor vs. Ike ~ by Robin Gerber, 2008
  • A Year by the Sea: Thoughts of an Unfinished Woman ~ by Joan Anderson, 1999
  • In Our Time: Memoir of a Revolution ~ by Susan Brownmiller, 1999
  • In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens: Womanist Prose ~ by Alice Walker, 1983
  • Out of Africa ~ by Isak Dinesen, 1938
  • Lives of Our Own: Secrets of Salty Old Women ~ by Caroline Bird, 1995
  • What We Know So Far: Wisdom Among Women ~ edited by Beth Benatovich, 1995
  • Bookends: Two Women, One Enduring Friendship ~ by Leona Rostenberg and Madeleine Stern, 2001
  • Sisterhood Is Powerful: An Anthology of Writings from the Women's Liberation Movement ~ edited by Robin Morgan, 1970
  • A Room of One's Own ~ by Virginia Woolf, 1929
  • Women Who Run with the Wolves ~ by Clarissa Pinkola Estes, 1992
  • Reinventing Home: Six Working Women Look at Their Home Lives ~ by Laurie Abraham, et al, 1991
CHILDREN'S (because we're all children at heart)

  • Blueberry Girl ~ by Neil Gaiman, 2009
  • Miss Rumphius ~ by Barbara Cooney, 1982

Thursday, November 19, 2009

The Triumph of Deborah ~ a teaser


This bit is quoted from The Triumph of Deborah by Eva Etzioni-Halevy (2008), pages 155-156:
"Exalted judge, what does the Torah decree:  How long after his wife's demise is it permissible for a widower to take a new wife?"

"If this matter has been burdening you, you did well to come to me with it, for I have good tidings for you.  The Torah does not lay down any injunction at all in this respect.  All you need to do is to consult the dictates of your own heart.  And since I surmise that by now you are hankering after a new woman," she added shrewdly, "you would do well to consult her, too."

To this the man had a rather astounding reply.  "It is precisely what I am doing at this moment."

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Teaser ~ We Are Our Mothers' Daughters

Today's teaser is from pages 62-63 of We Are Our Mothers' Daughters by Cokie Roberts (1998):

"Like so many other areas of female endeavor in the last thirty years, we tend to think that the idea of women on the battlefield is something brand-new under the sun.  It's true that the congressional debate on the Persian Gulf War marked the first time I can remember the phrase "our men and women in the military" used regularly to describe the fighting force.  (As a reporter covering the debate, I was struck by this interesting bit of rhetoric and then I realized that it was also the first time I had regularly heard the term" our men in the military."  It had always been "our boys in Vietnam" or "our boys in Korea," leading me to the quite delightful observation that this was not the first time a woman had turned a boy into a man.")

Monday, November 16, 2009

Question of the Week ~ racial profiling

 

“Racial profiling by the police is unjust, even if it might make us somewhat safer.”  Do you agree with that statement?  Answer yes or no, and then please tell us why.