
John
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Narrado por:
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Nicholas Bell
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De:
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Niall Williams
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Reseñas editoriales
A formidable work of scholarship and imagination, this is a beautifully written reimagining of John the Apostle's final years in exile. Old, frail, and blind, John has instructed his small group of followers on the island of Patmos to wait for Christ's return, but he is slow in coming. The faith of the men dwindles, and even John himself is tested. Eventually John and his followers return to Ephesus, where John dictates his Gospel. Performer Nicholas Bell brings beautifully enunciated and rhythmic narration to this richly imagined account of the last surviving apostle.
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Deeply Spiritual Story
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Would you say that listening to this book was time well-spent? Why or why not?
Yes. NW is a fabulous writer and I never wanted to put it down.What was the most interesting aspect of this story? The least interesting?
Most: Portrayal of a fragile community of faith.Least: How sectarianism starts/is inevitable (I would've liked more on this)
What three words best describe Nicholas Bell’s performance?
Solemn but salivary (too many swallowing sounds)If this book were a movie would you go see it?
Yes definitelyAny additional comments?
Niall Williams asks the question "How hard was it, in the first days, to cling to a faith in the extraordinary story of Christ. NW's answer is, soul-destroying hard! The message that Jesus' disciples believed he had brought from heaven must have seemed incredible even to them and their tiny numbers of followers. NW's book is a gripping portrait of the fragility of an early Christian community as it waited in vain for Jesus' return. They were doing so during a time and in a place that, it seems, was unusually full of powerful persuasive cults including competing ones that also Jesus in their narratives. The story is fantastically powerful because we know, of course, how gloriously it unfolded for Christianity in the centuries that followed.
But, "John" is ultimately unsatisfying. NW' resolution of the complex components of doubt that multiply in the book felt to me like a cop out. No spoiler here but I really wanted to know how, without magic, NW felt his characters managed to keep the magical story alive. My sense is NW thinks it must have involved magic but does he really believe that?
Also NW only narrowly avoids Python. At one point someone does say "He's not the messiah!"
Still I recommend the book.
A fascinating study of the power of faith, but...
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the authors descriptions of places and people
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A good book if you are in the mood for reflection.
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The internecine jealousy and battling of “Matias’ and his followers felt heavily fictionalized.
The intense love of John for his followers
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