The Dovekeepers
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The Dovekeepers

3.98 of 5 stars 3.98  ·  rating details  ·  22,618 ratings  ·  4,072 reviews
Over five years in the writing,
The Dovekeepers is Alice Hoffman’s most ambitious and mesmerizing novel, a tour de force of imagination and research, set in ancient Israel.

In 70 C.E., nine hundred Jews held out for months against armies of Romans on Masada, a mountain in the Judean desert. According to the ancient historian Josephus, two women and five children survived. Ba...more
Kindle Edition, 514 pages
Published October 4th 2011 by Scribner
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Christina White
Alice Hoffman brought me back in time and I enjoyed learning about what life was like in 70 C.E. The writing was beautiful and at times poetic. I like my poetry in short doses though and after two hundred pages of lyrical prose I was ready to move on with the story. I liked the book, in fact I was swept away in the lives of the brave women it was about. Revka, Aziza, Shirah and Yael were strong women who lived amazing lives and were the only survivors of the Masada massacre. Unfortunately, the p...more
Kim
There are many reasons why I wouldn’t like this book:

1. I hate feeling dumb.

2. It’s set in Ancient Israel, 70 C.E. to be exact, and the fact that I had to ask what C.E. meant --being a child of B.C and A.D --did not go over well (Refer to #1)

3. It’s set in Ancient Israel and I, shamefully, have absolutely no clue what happened back then. I mean… besides the Last Temptation of Christ and bible stories that I kind of sort of remember. (#1)

4. The author also wrote Practical Magic, which I have not...more
Louise
Story Description:

Over five years in the writing, The Dovekeepers is Alice Hoffman’s most ambitious and mesmerizing novel, a tour de force of imagination and research, set in ancient Israel.

In 70 C.E., nine-hundred Jews held out for months against armies of Romans on Masada, a mountain in the Judean desert. According to the ancient historian Josephus, two women and five children survived. Based on this tragic and iconic event, Hoffman’s novel is a spellbinding tale of four extraordinarily bold,...more
Cheryl
Over two thousand years ago a group of approximately 900 Jewish rebels fled Jerusalem and settled in the ancient fortress called Masada. Set high in the desert mountains, the fortress had been constructed for King Herod and was considered to be impenetrable. In this novel, Alice Hoffman traces the paths of four fictional women whose intertwined lives become apparent when they arrive at Masada seeking refuge. Hoffman weaves a tale of friendship, love, loyalty and sorrow set against the background...more
Sarah Ryburn
i've finally finished this lengthy read. hoffman tells the tragedy of masada, king herod's mountain fortress and the refuge of 900 jewish rebels and their families who fled the fall of jerusalem in ad 70, through four female narrators. what an experience! the place, masada, and the struggle of its inhabitants to survive, their faith intact, came to vivid life through these pages, but it was not always an easy read. there were sittings when i read no more than 20 or 30 pages. that's unusual for m...more
Linda Hart
An exceptional read. This is a masterpiece, a wonderful, mesmerizing book about the lives of four strong Jewish women, each with different backgrounds, powerful personalities, and distinct stories of there own. Their histories collided when destiny/circumstances found them living at the Jewish stronghold, Masada, during the last and final siege by the Romans. According to the historian, Josephus, two of these women and five children survived the horrendous event.

I agree with Janet, a goodreads...more
Carole
This is a work of historical fiction. The story is based on the Roman attack on the fortress at Masada in 73 A.D. and the resulting mass suicide. Since I have visited this site in present-day Israel, I was interested in reading a novel based on this event.

In terms of the history, Hoffman has done an admirable job of researching and narrating the events at Masada. She describes the time, place and culture of the ancient Hebrews with great detail.

However, in terms of the fictional part of the nove...more
Amy
Nov 10, 2011 Amy rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Amy by: Sharon Kay Penman
Never before has a book entranced me the way The Dovekeepers by Alice Hoffman has. I’ve literally just finished reading this book and I can’t get my mind to settle down. It’s almost as if I’ve ran a race, my adrenaline is pumping and my heart beating a mile a minute, scenes from the book keep going around and around in my head. My urgent need to tell everyone about this beautifully haunting book is taking over all other thoughts, so I need to get this review out before I explode!

Alice Hoffman is...more
Amy S
This has been a hard one to rate, I would say I am at 4.5. I go back and forth between four and five stars. This was another book that I had to stop cold in the middle as we moved, and so I had to pick it back up after a break and that's affected my rating as well! Anyway, on with it!

The book is set 70 CE, when the Romans were systematically destroying all Jews. They hunted down each population, city, group, and slaughtered them; men, women, and children. Any spared were given a life of brutal s...more
Janet
For fans of Alice Hoffman this book is a mixture of the new and the familiar. Devotees will recognize the strong women with unusual, even magical abilities. What's new is the historical setting and time---the fortress of Masada in the year 70 CE. Also, Hoffman's language struck me as different in this book.

I think whether or not readers like this book will hinge on their reaction to the language Hoffman uses to recreate the world of her women. I loved the level of detail. I felt the sea salt in...more
Vicki Hoare
4½. I have changed my rating for this book three times so far. I was fascinated by this story but I couldn't quite get to five stars.

In 70 AD nine hundred Jews held out for months against armies of Romans on a mountain outside the Judean desert, Masada. (taken from the book blurb). The Dovekeepers is a fiction using this event as a base. The style reminds me of Geraldine Brooks and is as good as the books she has written.

During the first part of the book I struggled with the social and religiou...more
Kiwileese
This book is wonderful, highly recommend it to anyone after a book where you will fall in love with the characters.

Amazon.com Review
Amazon Best Books of the Month, October 2011: Yael was born of a dead mother and father who knows how to become invisible. Revka learned silence when her grandsons lost their voices after witnessing their mother’s brutal murder. Aziza became a boy to protect herself, and hates being forced to turn back into a woman. And Shirah will do anything to protect those she...more
Jennifer Rayment
The Good Stuff

* I wish I had the words to express how wonderful this book is. I will be honest if Simon and Schuster hadn't sent it to me for review, I probably wouldn't have picked it up and let me tell you that would have been a shame. This book is haunting and sad but yet so full of hope and of the resilience of the human spirit
* Beautiful raw and honest story and just so god-damned emotional to read
* Exceptionally real and strong female characters
* History written so it comes alive and y...more
Mandy R
The only reason I would give this book 2 Stars is due to the amount of research that Alice Hoffman had obviously put into this novel, which I certainly appreciated. Honestly though, I think that this roughly 500 page book could have been done in about 200 pages.

Poetic descriptions saturated this novel, making for an incredibly dull read. When an author spends two pages describing wind I would rather not read it. I get it, it's windy! It has no bearing on the plot, would you please move on with t...more
Ellen
Oct 06, 2011 Ellen marked it as to-read  ·  review of another edition
Recommended by the Old Firehouse Books. Masada.
Erinn
I loved this book. Historically consistent with a depth of narrative that moved me to be very invested in what happened to the 4 protagonists. Great read.
Kym Smith
Hoffman’s novel presents an entirely unique look into one of bloodiest events in history: the mass suicide that occurred at Masada in 70 AD. In the century following the death of Christ, nearly one thousand renegade Jews flee to the hilltop fortress of Masada, where they are eventually surrounded on all sides by the legions of Rome. Their choice is clear: they can either renounce their faith and live out their lives as slaves of the Empire, or they can die for their beliefs, either on the battle...more
Leon

Over five years in the writing,

The Dovekeepers is Alice Hoffman’s most ambitious and mesmerizing novel, a tour de force of imagination and research, set in ancient Israel.

In 70 C.E., nine hundred Jews held out for months against armies of Romans on Masada, a mountain in the Judean desert. According to the ancient historian Josephus, two women and five children survived. Based on this tragic and iconic event, Hoffman’s novel is a spellbinding tale of four extraordinarily bold, resourceful, a

...more
Paul
I initially found this book to be a bit more difficult than most to get into; the flowery, literary writing style just seemed a bit overdone—even forced—for my taste. I ordinary love to savor some good literary writing, but rather than draw me in, the style here just served to keep me somewhat at a distance, to the point where I would at times find myself putting the book down to do something else.

One of my biggest gripes as the story unfolded was the liberal sprinkling of Jewish/Hebrew referen...more
Kris
Overall, I loved this book. After I finished it I spent hours on the internet looking up photos, historical facts, etc. I kind of wish I had done that sooner. The mountain I had in my mind was much smaller and about a third as high. I love that these were mostly actual people. It is fascinating to me to learn about how people lived in other places and times.
There were a few things I didn't like so much. It seems there were a lot of extra details and repetition. I think a lot could have been le...more
Cindy Cunningham
I admire Alice Hoffman for taking on this story and for doing it as she has, through the lives of 4 women. I have read much by Ms. Hoffman and enjoyed her deft storytelling. Her style has always been a bit lighter, always romantic and often including magical realism. So, this book is a real departure for her. The style threw me at first; it seemed sort of dramatic, less intimate than her books normally are, and studied or deliberate. But, as I warmed to the story and accepted that we were readin...more
Hannah Reynolds
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Eric
Although we now have Yeats's "twenty centuries of stony sleep" separating us from what happened on the rocky redoubt of Masada, it is Alice Hoffman's major accomplishment to collapse that distance and make us feel that astonishing human (and natural) drama in accessible, emotionally direct and yet deeply complicated and historically resonant ways. As I think back to being so transfixed, as a teenager, by the Masada miniseries back in 1981, with Peter Strauss and Peter O’Toole in the memorable le...more
Mike
History is often told by men, involving narratives where men are the only focus. This one sided approach is very slowly changing for the better, not least in the epic historical novel, The Dove Keepers where Alice Hoffman tells the tale of the first-century holdout against the Romans in the Dead Sea fortress of Masada, seen through the eyes of four women whose stories prior to and during the fortress struggle culminate in shared work in the dovecotes, a key strategy to maintain food supplies in...more
Sara Lesley Arnold
At my synagogue’s most recent sisterhood brunch, I ran into Renee, an old family friend whom I had not seen in more than 15 years. I greeted her with a smile and a hug, and we wandered together to the temple library, where she shared with me her insight into its significance and history. Suddenly donning a serious expression and looking into my eyes, Renee handed me a book she was bringing in for the library book sale, insisting I read it.

I hesitated to pick up The Dovekeepers, reading in the ja...more
Cheyenne
The Dovekeepers illuminates history. The way Alice writes and the way she describes Yael,Revka,Aziza,and Shirah brings them to life. The lives of these four strong-willed and fiercely independent women intersect in the desperate days of war and destruction. They're not only dovekeepers, they also keep secrets about who they are, where they come from, who fathered them, and whom they once loved. I thought it was horrible when Yael's mother died during her birth and clearly she had no control over...more
Daniela
I enjoyed the book, but I did not love it. I felt like I was getting a sense of the time and place, but not fully. I appreciate what Alice Hoffman did, using the perspectives of the women to tell the story of the fall of Masada, and the writing is beautiful, but as others have pointed out, rather repetitive. As a result, I felt that the perspective was becomeing increasingly more narrow, rather than more expansive, as the novel progressed.

I love historical fiction, and I feel that it contribute...more
Grace Elliot
The Dovekeepers tells the story of four women and their fight for survival during the seige of Masada.
I bought the book after reading a review which rated it 5 stars (exceptional), and I had to debate long and hard between rating it a 4 or 5 star review.
The story is related from the viewpoint of four women. Admittedly, I usually shy away from books broken into sections, each told by a different narrator, because if I'm involved with a character, I don't want to leave them behind. However, Ms Ho...more
Amy
Alice Hoffman’s novel The Dovekeepers is an outstanding accomplishment, an historical saga that will live in the hearts of readers for years to come. Hoffman skillfully brings to life the remarkable events of the Roman siege against the Jews at Mesada. According to the only know historical record of the event, five children and two women survived the tragic events, using this as her launching point Hoffman incorporates archeological findings and ancient spiritual beliefs to transport readers to...more
Patricia
Oh my! Heavy/compelling. The philosophical base, for me at least, is found on the next to the last page:
"On this day we celebrate the Blessing of the Sun, for that glorious orb is in the exact same place as it had been during Creation, when God brought forth good and evil, imbuing our world with both at the same hour when he created the word and brought us out of silence, so we might make our own choices."
Alice Hoffman spent time, much time, researching an era lost. It is a fictionalized present...more
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Alice Hoffman was born in New York City on March 16, 1952 and grew up on Long Island. After graduating from high school in 1969, she attended Adelphi University, from which she received a BA, and then received a Mirrellees Fellowship to the Stanford University Creative Writing Center, which she attended in 1973 and 74, receiving an MA in creative writing. She currently lives in Boston and New York...more
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