@theredheadreads

Showing posts with label Bookstagram. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bookstagram. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 28, 2019

The Heart of a King


As an ELA teacher and lover of reading, I have subscribed to several YA book subscription boxes and even moderated for one until it went defunct last year. I moderated romance novels (not my genre of choice, but the only opening they had) for about five months before I was able to switch to literary fiction. As a moderator and  public school teacher, my recent reading has been inundated with secular themes and characters. The bookstagram I started when I started moderating took off and I realized that I could be using that social media platform to promote books that would promote Christ-likeness.

There was a slight problem, though. Christian fiction I have read in the past left a bad taste in my mouth. Like the romance novels I proctored, the majority of Christian novels I had read in past felt shallow and focused on eliciting an emotional response, failing to challenge the reader to be introspective on how they could change themselves or the world around them. Plot lines and characters seem to fall out of a mold, removing creativity and uniqueness from the story.

So a few months ago when a friend of mine who reviews Christian fiction encouraged me to sign up to be part of the launch team for a book to be released in May, I jumped at the chance to reintroduce myself to a genre I had avoided for so long.

The Heart of a King: The Loves of Solomon is a compilation of short stories about four of the wives of King Solomon. I was apprehensive from the start as this book seemed to fit into my preconceived notions of what I would be reading.

And it was: a chick-flick romance novel.

If you are looking for a romantic view of Israel's (and the world's) wisest king, then this is the book for you. Smith introduces you to four wives of different histories from different times in Solomon's life.
Naamah the Ammonite, his first wife and a friend of his youth. Namaah seeks to know Solomon and his God in a more personal way. She also hopes Solomon will obey God's commands to kings and be the husband of one wife.
Abishag, the young wife-nurse of David selected by Bathsheba knowing Solomon would marry the young wives of his father. Solomon and Abishag fall in love through grief and love of music.
Siti, the young Egyptian princess who gives Solomon Gezer, but refuses to give up her god, Bastet and demands a palace of her own.
Nicaula, the virgin Queen of Sheba who seeks Solomon's wisdom and a trade agreement. In her search, she finds wisdom for herself in a relationship with the God of Israel.

Personally, I struggled to read this novel. After reading the selections about the first two wives, I set the book down and it glared at me for nearly two weeks. I legitimately could not read anything else knowing I agreed to review the book honestly, which I refused to do until I finished the novel, but I had no desire to finish (see my predicament?). Eventually, I did push through and finish the novel. I enjoyed the conflicts present in the last two wives better than the first, but not enough to say that I love the book.

What I didn't like:

  • Solomon woos several of his wives with the same poems and sayings, including calling each of them "my dove" and a passage describing Solomon holding and kissing intimately them prior to marriage, resulting in a sexual rise from the lady, only to say "we must wait until love awakens"as he walks away.

    These descriptions bothered me as Solomon did not reveal himself as a man in love, rather he sounded like a sexual predator, manipulating his most current victim. While I understand many readers may not interpret Solomon's words and characters in this way, I could not shake the feeling that Solomon was a master manipulator.

    After reading Siti's section, I was more understanding of Solomon's motivations to keep peace via marriages to princesses of other lands, but then he manipulated Nicaula into a marriage and child after she showed her unease and asked to call off the marriage. His wording in this section, again, reminded me of a sexual predator offering confidence in the midst of insecurity rather than listening and backing off.
  • Solomon is a whiny crown prince and comes off as incredibly selfish throughout the book, although the selfishness does lessen toward the end.
  • Solomon's relationship with Adonai seems weak. Namaah and Abishag mention the strength of his faith, but it is not apparent to the reader. Yes, we are give the prayer when God offers Solomon anything and grants him wisdom and descriptions of his obsession with the building of the temple. The temple obsession is not a convincing argument for his love of Adonai, just his love of his father and fulfilling a duty. 
What I did like:
  • The characterization of Bathsheba as Queen Mother. While I am certain her position was difficult, I appreciated how Smith used her as a friend, confidante, and adviser to each of the wives. Bathsheba also showed wisdom in how she addressed, encouraged, and reprimanded her son, even after he was king.
  • The revelation that wisdom is not equal to morality or prudence. Solomon knew what he was supposed to do, but often foolishly chose to indulge his passions. I have done this in my own life, so I'm sure being the richest, wisest king of his era made temptations that much greater. I appreciated that Smith used the wives to challenge his foolishness.
  • Not all of the wives are believers. The contrast between the four wives adds interest in the book. I particularly enjoyed the dissonance between Siti and Nicaula. 
I must admit, Smith's book did not change my opinion on Christian fiction, but I know there are books in this genre that I will enjoy. I just need to keep looking. And maybe avoid romances.





I received a copy of this book from the publisher for an honest review. All opinions are my own.

Sunday, March 31, 2019

March Wrap Up

Big dreams this month...and not so big accomplishments. At least not in reading goals.

A bit of a rough month for us transportation-wise. My husband was in a wreck in December (he was rear-ended) and the insurance company of the driver at fault is FINALLY talking care of the issue. The day after his car was towed away, my car refused to start. On a morning I as running late, luckily my mother was able to come pick me up. My dad and cousin came to look at the car, but could not figure out the issue. My car was towed the next morning (yep, both cars in the shop at once. Thank heavens for my in-laws who have been lending us a car since my husband's wreck in December). After two days of inspecting, the dealership found that a rodent had chewed through the main wiring of my car. Guess what? That damage isn't covered by your warranty. Eventually, the car was fixed. My husband is still waiting to hear back from insurance about his.
Most of March Book Haul

We have had a record number of snow days this winter: a total of TEN! Far more than I ever remember. Ever. With that, my district elected to sacrifice half of our spring break so we will not have to go to school after Memorial Day. Bummer for now, great for the summer.

A few great things happened this month, too!

I officially interviewed to direct Barefoot in the Park for the local community theatre and was notified that would be directing the show just a few days later!

I also scored some amazing deals on books at my favorite store, Cargo Largo! Over 25 books for under $80!

Now for this month's wrap up:

The Hate U Give - Angie Thomas
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Besides being a culturally relevant, poignant story of how to be brave enough to speak up. Starr's momma, Lisa, was my favorite character, dropping wisdom and truth bombs left and right. The book is also an English teacher's dream, filled with figurative language, great character development, and themes that challenge us all to be better people.

Ami: Child of the Stars - Enrique Barrios
⭐⭐⭐⭐
A student handed this book to me one morning, telling me it was her favorite book growing up. Ami has a great message of the power and law of Love. It presents a utopia of a world at peace.

Some of my favorite bookstagrammers are hosting #readgushpanem this month and I'm excited to participate and read the series for the first time ever. Yup, you read that correctly. I have never read The Hunger Games before. The movies came out while I was teaching at a private school, but my students were so obsessed that I was turned off. Plus, that was the era of YA dystopian books turned to film and Divergent was a disappointment.
As I spilled most of my feelings during our Read & Gush discussions, the summaries here are going to be abbreviated.

The Hunger Games - Suzanne Collins
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Truly fantastic world-building and beautifully complex characters with realistic internal and external struggles. I'm totally Team Peeta.

Catching Fire - Suzanne Collins
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
I was a bit conflicted on how Collins was going to add more intensity to the series when this book takes place outside the Games, but she exceeded my expectations and kept me glued to the story from cover to cover.


26 Letters

Some time in our elementary years, we were all introduced to a magical sentence that includes all 26 letters of the alphabet:  The quick bro...