The Secret Magdalene
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Rating a book on its merits
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Rip
(last edited Apr 19, 2008 10:36AM)
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rated it 5 stars
Apr 19, 2008 10:35AM

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I once saw a play about a serial killer called Killing for Company. A true story and the killer himself, Dennis Neilson, was locked away for life for his ugly crimes. He was the single voice speaking from his cell which became his apartment where he committed his crimes and then became his cell again. I hated his crimes, but the play was so well constructed and the killer so well thought out, it made me pause and really think about how a man could do the things he did and how he saw the world. In the end, I pitied him and his victims. So I would rate this play very highly (just as I do The Secret Magdalene, which I loved for its prose and for stretching my mind) for its ability to make me think about a person's actions that I hope could never be mine, and learn and stand in someone's else shoes. Good conversation, folks. I will come back and see if there's more.




Edward! I'm off to have a look at The Virgin and the Priest. If everyone hates it, it must say something.

If you read The Virgin and The Priest, let me know what you think. I'd love to discuss this book with someone or hear what they think of it. Where I work that would be a non-starter.


It's a free country (I hope) and people are allowed to like or dislike a book,whatever their reasons. Still, reading those reviews gets on my nerves. If you don't like a book, don't read it. If the language or themes bother you, put the book away and move on, but don't say that the book is bad.
I read a review of Phillip Pullman's Lyra trilogy, where one reviewer said they thought the first book was "stupid and boaring." (their spelling not mine) Okay - that's their opinion, and although I disagree, the review was valid. Another review said the equivalent of, "this book is against Christianity and my church basically banned it," and here's the kicker, THEY HADN'T EVEN READ THE BOOK. How can you give a book a bad review if you haven't read it?

Afterwards, the author of Rosslyn Revealed contacted me to tell me that this particular reviewer had released his own book refuting the claims of Rosslyn Revealed and other books and that his book was financed by the Roman Catholic Church. Apparently they have a disinformation department which is tasked with undermining anything that would negate its own absurd dogma and expose its dubious history. It is remarkable that negative reviews have not been posted for The Virgin and The Priest yet. It must be still under their radar.....





And yes, reviews that are based on a person's religious beliefs are no reviews at all, unless they are honest about that, and explain what their problem is.


i read the book
liked it a lot at the time-as i recall it was pretty gorgeous prose, poetic
strong female characters which is always a plus with me
it hasn't really stayed with me though
i can see how a believer would take offense to the jesus story being reinterpreted
i mean the bible is their book
it's like the gone with the wind thing
and i know i held my breath on the lotr movies
plus there is the added emotionalism of spiritual belief-so people feel strongly
a lot of the disbelieving comments above also sound full of emotionalism
also there were elements that are definitely anti biblical
i thought jesus still came off as a supreme being
just maeve (or was that daughter of the shinning isle) had a intimate knowledge of his manhood
haha
the son of god was man on earth
so it makes sense that he's more earthy to her
i'd like to reread the barren tree passage
it's definitely a different interpretation than the biblical
official reviews have standards
online reviews have looser standards so i'm not so concerned that believers are calling out the harlot so to speak
it's a public forum-what the heck
plus how are you going to stop them
it they want to spend their time chasing pagan books around to condemn who cares?



i read about 4-5 "biblical times" books around the same time period including a couple by cunningham and another female author and one about david's life
i may indeed have gotten these books mingled as magdalene or mary was in the title of several
and the cover had an estatic mary figure on the front
the cunningham books were in a series and started off with the magdalene character called maeve only to be called mary magdalene in the 2nd or 3rd book
the ones i recall were the passion of the magdalene or the magdalene's passion and daughter of the shinnig isles
i thought secret magdalene was one of that lot
now i'm going to have to find a copy and see if i've read it!
is it any good? lol

And you, Elizabeth. It sounds like you read a whole slew of somewhat similar fiction. I do that now and again and eventually can't remember my nose from my ear.
Is it any good? My humble opinion is all I have...YES!
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