414th out of 949 books
—
1,428 voters
Christ the Lord: The Road to Cana (Christ the Lord #2)
by
Anne Rice
Anne Rice’s second book in her hugely ambitious and courageous life of Christ begins during his last winter before his baptism in the Jordan and concludes with the miracle at Cana.
It is a novel in which we see Jesus—he is called Yeshua bar Joseph—during a winter of no rain, endless dust, and talk of trouble in Judea.
Legends of a Virgin birth have long surrounded Yeshua, ye...more
It is a novel in which we see Jesus—he is called Yeshua bar Joseph—during a winter of no rain, endless dust, and talk of trouble in Judea.
Legends of a Virgin birth have long surrounded Yeshua, ye...more
Hardcover, 256 pages
Published
March 4th 2008
by Knopf
(first published November 1st 2005)
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The Road to Cana is a novel and does not pretend to be otherwise. It is the story of about a year in Jesus' life, and ends at the wedding at Cana.
Some of the characters are known from scripture; others are creations of Ms. Rice. Jesus is portrayed as being a somewhat strange, but very loving member of a large extended family. James is named as his brother, but it is noted that he was Joseph's son by his first wife, not by Mary. Further the book, which is written in the first person and told from...more
Some of the characters are known from scripture; others are creations of Ms. Rice. Jesus is portrayed as being a somewhat strange, but very loving member of a large extended family. James is named as his brother, but it is noted that he was Joseph's son by his first wife, not by Mary. Further the book, which is written in the first person and told from...more
This is a first person autobiographic narrative by the person known to history as Jesus of Nazareth. This book covers the period of time of several months leading into the beginning of his ministry. Since it is a novel it can cover a lot of details that are left out of the Gospel accounts. Thus this book can describe many details of events that are not covered in the New Testament. For example, this book explains how the valuable gifts brought by the wise men at the time of Jesus' birth ended up...more
I would NEVER in a million years have predicted that I would even read this book - much less like it. I've picked up a couple of Anne Rice novels in the past and simply couldn't get into them. This, of course, was back in her "vampire" days, and that topic never has really turned me on. I even tried as a child to like Dark Shadows, but it just didn't work for me.
A couple of months ago, though, I heard a review of this book on NPR. I vaguely recalled that Rice had had some sort of conversion expe...more
A couple of months ago, though, I heard a review of this book on NPR. I vaguely recalled that Rice had had some sort of conversion expe...more
Mar 24, 2008
Jason
added it
Anyone audacious enough to attempt to write a narrative version of the life of Christ is bound to get themselves into hot water. Anne Rice, of "Vampire Chonricles" fame is certainly no exception. When word broke that her goal was to write the life of Christ before her death, I'm sure that some diehard fans of her series were hoping for a New Agey, controversial, latter day "Last Temptation of Christ", replete with Jesus and Mary Magdalene sex scenes, and the proverbial Pie in the Face to traditi...more
Tidak seorangpun mampu menuliskan biografi lengkap tentang Yesus. Kita tidak memiliki catatan sejarah tentang tiga puluh tahun pertama kehidupan-Nya. Banyak orang beranggapan bahwa keempat kitab Injil (Matius, Markus, Lukas, Yohanes) memberikan biografi komplit tentang Yesus. Kenyataannya tidaklah demikian. Markus baru memulai kisah Yesus ketika Ia berumur tiga puluh tahun. Matius dan Lukas menambahkan kisah-kisah seputar kelahiran-Nya, dan berbagai pengajaran dari Yesus. Sama seperti kitab Mark...more
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I would describe Christ The Lord, The Road To Cana by Anne
Rice as a drama, beautifully written, narrated in the first person by Jesus Of Nazareth whom is called at this biblcal
time Yeshua bar Joseph.
Yeshua(Jesus)draws you into the events of his life
articulating his final year before and afer his life changing Baptism at the Jordan,a face-off with Satan,and a stunning description of The Wedding at Cana.
In conversational prose Yeshua depicts his life amongst his Beloved Family and community, tak...more
Rice as a drama, beautifully written, narrated in the first person by Jesus Of Nazareth whom is called at this biblcal
time Yeshua bar Joseph.
Yeshua(Jesus)draws you into the events of his life
articulating his final year before and afer his life changing Baptism at the Jordan,a face-off with Satan,and a stunning description of The Wedding at Cana.
In conversational prose Yeshua depicts his life amongst his Beloved Family and community, tak...more
The Road to Cana, Anne Rice's second book in her hugely ambitious life of Christ, begins before his baptism in the Jordan and concludes with the miracle at Cana. It is a novel in which we see Jesus, the man, living quietly in Nazareth as he has for many years. He is still known as Yeshua Bar Joseph. And he is enduring a winter of no rain, endless dust and looming trouble in Judea. Legends of a virgin birth have long surrounded Yeshua, yet for decades he has lived no differently than the others w...more
Just finished this early this morning. Wonderfully written novel! Rice gives life to the details of the biblical text and those within the biblical text that remain un-uttered and unseen but lying very near the events that are inscribed in our Bibles. This is a very physical portrayal of the social fabric that existed in the first century and an imaginative telling of how the man from Nazareth experiences the depths of human difficulty while also sensing a call toward a different kind of Kingdom...more
Wow. Not only has she done her historical research, she’s done her Biblical research! (She put in a reference to the Sons of Zadok for crying out loud, most people have no clue who they are! AND she used them accurately!)
Cynical beast that I am, I wasn’t sure what to expect, but I had hope. She didn’t disappoint. I can’t help but wonder what some of her old Le Stat fans will think, because this is a purely Christian novel.
She writes the story in first person from Jesus’s point of view. It’s take...more
Cynical beast that I am, I wasn’t sure what to expect, but I had hope. She didn’t disappoint. I can’t help but wonder what some of her old Le Stat fans will think, because this is a purely Christian novel.
She writes the story in first person from Jesus’s point of view. It’s take...more
I was surprised when I saw this book on the shelves of my local library. Surely this couldn't be the same Anne Rice that wrote the Vampire Chronicles, I thought. But a look at the photo and the blurb on the dust jacket told me that it was indeed her and I just had to read it. It was fascinating. She is known for the great depth of character she brought to the vampires she wrote about - in fact to all her characters no matter who or what she's writing about. In this book, she has applied style to...more
This is a sequel to Christ the Lord Ourt of Egypt and covers the time Christ is about 31 to the time of the miracle at the Marriage of Cana.
The family is back in Nazarath and Jesus is being hassled by friends and family about not being married. In fact, he dreams of marrying a beautiful cousin and struggles with this - knowing this is not his destiny yet he struggles with his feelings for her. The concept here is that as both God and man he has the obvious characteristics of a man. A lot of t...more
The family is back in Nazarath and Jesus is being hassled by friends and family about not being married. In fact, he dreams of marrying a beautiful cousin and struggles with this - knowing this is not his destiny yet he struggles with his feelings for her. The concept here is that as both God and man he has the obvious characteristics of a man. A lot of t...more
Fascinating and imaginative, this fictional account of the year leading up to Jesus' public ministry might be a little hard to swallow in some ways, but I give Ms. Rice five stars for a masterful attempt: She gives words to the inner life of Jesus himself. I don't think the book completely succeeds, mind you. She portrays a Jesus who isn't aware of his actual deity-- who chooses not to be aware of it, that is--until circumstances propel him into public life. I just can't buy such ignorance on hi...more
I'm glad I read this book - giving a glimpse of a human Jesus and some of the sorts of issues and situations that could have arisen at those times. However, I must confess to being disappointed that it used only the most popular bible stories from selected gospels and did not take into account acknowleged biblical scholarship which has demonstrated where many stories either are a type of parable or have to be viewed in the context of Jewish custom at the time and the beliefs of the time.
In that...more
In that...more
Aug 20, 2009
Ivy
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
Anyone interested in Jesus of Nazareth.
"The Road to Cana" begins with a 30 year-old Jesus (Yeshua Bar Joseph) on the brink of beginning his ministry. He finds himself in the middle of a life and death conflict where two young men are about to be stoned, accused of committing unspeakable acts. The rabbi of Nazareth is present and attempts to mediate, but the angry mob calls for blood and will not listen to reason.
This conflict is linked to another family who have a struggle of their own. Abigail is a beautiful young woman who should h...more
This conflict is linked to another family who have a struggle of their own. Abigail is a beautiful young woman who should h...more
I decided that I am officially an Anne Rice fan. Although I do not really get into the Twilight series, I did, many years ago, read Anne Rice's vampire books. Now I am reading her "Christ the Lord" books and have enjoyed both of them very much.
This one I read in about three days, and although much of the book is fiction, I feel the events and scenes are certainly realistic for the time period. I also feel a new or perhaps deeper love for Christ. Is this feeling simply lingering sentimentality f...more
This one I read in about three days, and although much of the book is fiction, I feel the events and scenes are certainly realistic for the time period. I also feel a new or perhaps deeper love for Christ. Is this feeling simply lingering sentimentality f...more
Though hardly religious and not a huge fan of Anne Rice I have read enough re-imagined novels about the life of Christ and Anne Rice's vampire novels (written by the 'agnostic' Ms Rice as opposed to the 'recently returned to the Catholic faith of her childhood' Ms Rice) to be interested in these her Christ The Lord novels - the first in the series being Out Of Egypt.
Totally readable in its own right (after all many of us already know the story), this, the second book in the series, follows the m...more
Totally readable in its own right (after all many of us already know the story), this, the second book in the series, follows the m...more
(4 1/2 stars)
Oh my! What a wonderful surprise this book is! "Christian fiction" is a horrible label that usually implies some half-acted version of a fairytale in which no character is touchable, but this is not the case. The road to Cana is gritty, twisting and doesn't have a lot of signs along the way, as Anne Rice writes it. In this book, we meet a character who is coming-to-identity in much the same way as one comes of age: slowly, confusedly, passionately. Yeshua juggles sibling rivalry,...more
Oh my! What a wonderful surprise this book is! "Christian fiction" is a horrible label that usually implies some half-acted version of a fairytale in which no character is touchable, but this is not the case. The road to Cana is gritty, twisting and doesn't have a lot of signs along the way, as Anne Rice writes it. In this book, we meet a character who is coming-to-identity in much the same way as one comes of age: slowly, confusedly, passionately. Yeshua juggles sibling rivalry,...more
This is the second book in the series. I like it better than the first. It is told from Jesus' point of view. I especially like the scene with Jesus and Satan in the desert. This is Anne Rice's introduction:
Once again, in this second novel in the Christ the Lord series, I seek to present a realistic fictional portrait of Our Lord, Jesus Christ, as He lived in Time. The novel is rooted in the faith that the Creator of the Universe became human, being born of the Virgin Mary, and remained among...more
Once again, in this second novel in the Christ the Lord series, I seek to present a realistic fictional portrait of Our Lord, Jesus Christ, as He lived in Time. The novel is rooted in the faith that the Creator of the Universe became human, being born of the Virgin Mary, and remained among...more
"I'd always known who I really was. I was God. And I'd chosen not to know it. Well, now I knew just what it meant to be the man who knew he was God."
I can’t seem to find the right words to describe my thoughts for this book. I am both inspired and saddened (to say the least), because regardless of how Ms. Rice fictionalized the story one thing was certain – the ending would be the same.
This story gives us a glimpse of Jesus’ humanity; a carpenter struggling on how to come to terms with his divi...more
"I'd always known who I really was. I was God. And I'd chosen not to know it. Well, now I knew just what it meant to be the man who knew he was God."
As the novel opens, Yeshua (Jesus) struggles with a sense of restlessness of purpose and a deep love for a comely kinswoman. Waves of isolation sweep over him as he comes to understand that serving the Lord's will takes precedence over the desires of his own heart. Whereas the first novel in this series, "Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt", hewed so cl...more
As the novel opens, Yeshua (Jesus) struggles with a sense of restlessness of purpose and a deep love for a comely kinswoman. Waves of isolation sweep over him as he comes to understand that serving the Lord's will takes precedence over the desires of his own heart. Whereas the first novel in this series, "Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt", hewed so cl...more
Anne Rice's Christ the Lord books are the best thing she has ever done. What drew me to Christianity was not necessarily the divine Christ but Christ the man. These books paint a wonderful picture of Jesus as a child and during the time leading up to the start of his ministry. When I think of Jesus as human, this comes close to how I picture Him.
This is another fascinating book. While it is still obviously a work of fiction, the author has done a great job in firstly researching the historic and cultural background, and secondly in harmonising John's gospel with the Synoptics. I found her portrayal of Jesus as both human and divine convincing and moving. (Again, the use of the first person was bold, but really worked well.) The conclusion was quite powerful - I wanted to be at that wedding! And to see the pull towards being the type of...more
I enjoyed this, the second of the Christ the Lord series more than the first, Out of Egypt. Rice has always shown great attention to detail, thoroughly researching for historical accuracy. She reconciles the conflicting ideas of Jesus as human and Jesus as divine in a way that few authors or filmmakers or artists have been able to capture. This tale, depicting Jesus in the months leading up to his baptism by John and his 40 days in the wilderness, shows the internal drama of one who is sinless b...more
I just loved this book. She takes such difficult subject matter (really ballsy of her to do in my opinion!) and does an excellent job of making Jesus completely approachable in the fully human part of his manifestation. I believed his pain, his joy, and his desires, and in no way did any of those seem to detract from his holiness...and yet, she balanced all that without anything that seemed to bang you over the head with how holy and good Jesus was. I think it's quite a skill to write in such a...more
A long time ago I went through Rice's Vampire chronicles and Mayfair witch books and was entertained. This book, however, moved me . Like her earlier works, it's as if she tapped into the truth of a myth but this time via subtlety. I love her interpretation of Christ's youth and her portrait of Josepth.
Changing anything on The Holy Scriptures is a risky move for any novelist. No matter whether that novelist is known to be great or mediocre, some people would not want their deep-seated belief to be rock by just any mortal author. Some people are curious but they almost always resist literary pieces that would challenge whatever is already written in The Holy Bible. After all, that book has been with us for thousand years, scrutinized by many scholars, translated into many languages and being he...more
This story is marvelous. It took me a while to read, about four weeks, but I'm also reading several books at once too and working on my own as well.
Yeshua is fully human, but is also, quite divine. In The Road to Cana there is a wedding about to happen, Avigail is going to marry Reuben. There is a very interesting line running through this that I have always held in the back of my mind, that what if Jesus wanted to marry since he was fully human, but in the same token, divine. He loves Avigail,...more
Yeshua is fully human, but is also, quite divine. In The Road to Cana there is a wedding about to happen, Avigail is going to marry Reuben. There is a very interesting line running through this that I have always held in the back of my mind, that what if Jesus wanted to marry since he was fully human, but in the same token, divine. He loves Avigail,...more
I have long been interested in fictional accounts of Christ's internal conflict as he reconciled his divinity and humanity—aspects of his being which make all the more powerful the love of God he represents both in the literal and figurative sense. In the tradition of The Last Temptation of Christ, Anne Rice's Christ the Lord series examines Jesus through both a historical and spiritual lens. While I found Out of Egypt to be a difficult read, I was engrossed in The Road to Cana, and feel that it...more
Moving and poetic. This book wasn't exactly what I was expecting--I was thinking it would basically follow the path of the Gospels with Jesus doing his teachings. But Rice has broken down Jesus's story into much more manageable parts. This one focuses on that period where Jesus is with his family, knows he's The Christ, and yet doesn't quite know when his ministry is supposed to start until the end of the book. Rice made Jesus very human, and yet without sin. The way she wrote him, his family, a...more
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Anne Rice (born Howard Allen Frances O'Brien) is a best-selling American author of gothic, supernatural, historical, erotica, and later religious themed books. Best known for The Vampire Chronicles, her prevailing thematical focus is on love, death, immortality, existentialism, and the human condition. She was married to poet Stan Rice for 41 years until his death in 2002. Her books have sold near...more
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Dec 29, 2008 10:24am