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Stunning covers by Uvi Poznansky, And an article on vernacular dialog in Biblical lust!
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★★★★★ Great images set an awesome stage for envisioning history
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From the rich bright colors of classical painting, through the pallor of engravings, the silk and foil-wrapped threads of old techniques, and even the mystical brush-strokes of modern art, Uvi Poznansky’s trail through art’s inspiration tells the story of King David’s erring sons Amnon and Absolom with startling immediacy. It’s a tale that starts with temptation and violation and ends with war’s hard-wrought peace—the dark side of Biblical history perhaps.
For me, the most lasting images are Guercino’s study for the Feast of Absalom—a picture that with its very lack of color offers a scarily graphic image of hatred, anger and despair—and Schwebel’s modern-day Jaffa Road and Zion Square. A father mourns in the vivid reds of Chagall, a general warns, and an aging kings looks back on his past—an image that surely sets the stage for the author’s beautiful novels of King David’s life and times.
There’s another Inspired by Art book coming soon, and I can hardly wait to enjoy it. Author Uvi Poznansky makes history come to life in her novels, and brings art to life in these beautiful art books too.
Disclosure: I found it on a deal and I love it.
Get ★★★★★ Inspired by Art: The Edge of Revolt
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An achingly beautiful woman bathing on a close-by roof


★★★★★ A compelling rendition of this tragic piece of David's story
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Uvi Poznansy's Inspired By Art—The Edge Of Revolt melds visual mastery with appropriate snatches of biblical verse. The result: Her readers see the tales of David's offspring Amnon, Tamar, and Absolom in new and meaningful ways. Her sequencing follows the chronology of the biblical tales. Her selection of the masters' works allows readers to appreciate the artists' allegiance to their respective societies in telling the Jewish David's story. The resulting versatility, oils to engravings, engravings to water colors, water colors to colored etchings, and more, dazzle the senses. An added bonus: Readers come away with a new appreciation of how great artists exploit the materials and technologies available to them by their cultures.
It's unfair to pick favorites, but I was so moved by some, I can't help commenting.
Poznansky's selection of Raffeallo Sanzio's David's Triumph, with it's gilt and prophetic grandeur, sets up the tragedy's to come. Huzzahs to Uvi for making it the first of the works to come.
Guercino's Amnon and Tamar oozes both sensuality and innocence. I cringed at his vivid prelude to rape, desolation, and rejection.
William Blake's David's Pardoning of Absalom, a masterful watercolour over black lead on paper, imbued me with a sense of the celestial, a fitting aura for an act of forgiveness.
David mourning Absolom: Chagall's sanguine dominance puts a proper emphasis on Absalom's treachery and demise.
The simplicity of Vallotton's David Ascending Mount of Olives underscores David's sorrowful state in ways that can't be matched by more lavish renditions.
Enough. You get my sense. Inspired By Art—The Edge of Revolt is a compelling rendition of this tragic piece of David's story.
Well done, Uvi.
Get ★★★★★ Inspired by Art: The Edge of Revolt
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You got back your lost love, your truck, and your dog


Twisted Webb Radio presents author/artist Uvi Poznansky


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Only forever, be my pride and my joy


So I was just about to say goodbye and so sorry, my mistake, this will never happen again, I promise, when all of a sudden Mrs. Horowitz said, “Natasha isn’t here.”
“What?” I cried.
“You deaf? I said, she isn’t here!”
“Where, then, is she?”
“Why should I tell you?”
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Because of this I wasn't able to sleep all night


Uvi Poznansky, a Renaissance Lady


I feel a breath of air as she fades away and I come in--
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Perhaps there is a light touch between us


Regardless of genre, books can do one of two things: they can let you escape from reality, or they can set a mirror before you where you can see it, even in its darkest corners, with brilliance and precision you have not faced before. My books do both. Set in a different era, for example WWII London, they sweep you away into remembering every detail of that time, from how women styled their hair to how a telephone call from a booth was connected overseas. But arching over all these details is the way you will engage with my characters, and follow them in the hard choices they must make. Their joys and sorrows may reflect what you have gone through in your past. If you want to see what’s in your heart, read my stories.
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Fun and fast interview and giveaway with Uvi


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Once in royal David's garden


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I will never let that happen to me


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His first home


The ebook edition is only $0.99 for a limited time, in honor of the audiobook release!
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Doing the happy dance! My audiobook is out


Listen to your heart...


She has a point, which is why I must argue against it. I close my hand upon the scroll, and shake my fist in the air. “History admires those who are strong! It is this that makes me strive to achieve great things.”
Bathsheba gives me a look--
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Let her voice be heard


To which I say, “What I have is hopes—”
“Doubts, hopes, what’s the difference? I deal with what’s certain, such as death.” To prove her point she raises her hand, which is covered with ropy veins, and with a strange sort of glee she slaps Gad the Seer across his cheek, full force. “See?” she croaks. “He can’t even bat an eye! Ah, dead as a doornail!”
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You don't want to wake the dead, do you?


“Strengthen me with raisins,” she murmured in my ear. “Refresh me with apples, for I am faint with love--”
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I knew she was in a playful mood


Don Warrick has already voiced the characters for the earlier books in the series, The Music of Us and Dancing with Air. From the beginning, working with him has been a joy, so I am thrilled for the renewed collaboration. And I wish you could hear the first chapter--which he has just completed--and witness him breathing life into Lenny and Natasha in their new adventure, this time on Normandy's shores and on the way to Paris--
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The voice behind Marriage before Death


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Discussion with Uvi Poznansky - come join us


This is how she opened her piece: As soon as I had reviewed three of the Inspired by Art books in this series, the last of which complemented this book, I knew I wanted to read the novels. As with the Art book, I found the third book, The Edge of Revolt, the most provocative and filled with new information...for me... I admit that somehow I had missed the impact of what happened to David in his later life...and to his children...
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The final book in the David Chronicles. A reader's response


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Should I forge my way to the other side?

Books mentioned in this topic
Marriage before Death (other topics)Inspired by Art: The Edge of Revolt (other topics)
Inspired by Art: The Edge of Revolt (other topics)
Inspired by Art: Fighting Goliath (other topics)
Inspired by Art: Fall of a Giant (other topics)
More...
It is spring.
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Opening their petals as if to let out a red-blood flame