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Damascus

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Damascus

By: Christos Tsiolkas
Narrated by: Saul Reichlin
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About this listen

The stunningly powerful new novel from the author of The Slap.

'They kill us, they crucify us, they throw us to beasts in the arena, they sew our lips together and watch us starve. They bugger children in front of fathers and violate men before the eyes of their wives. The temple priests flay us openly in the streets and the Judeans stone us. We are hunted everywhere and we are hunted by everyone. We are despised, yet we grow. We are tortured and crucified and yet we flourish. We are hated and still we multiply. Why is that? You must wonder, how is it we survive?'

Christos Tsiolkas' stunning new novel Damascus is a work of soaring ambition and achievement, of immense power and epic scope, taking as its subject nothing less than events surrounding the birth and establishment of the Christian church.

Based around the gospels and letters of St Paul, and focusing on characters one and two generations on from the death of Christ, as well as Paul (Saul) himself, Damascus nevertheless explores the themes that have always obsessed Tsiolkas as a writer: class, religion, masculinity, patriarchy, colonisation, refugees; the ways in which nations, societies, communities, families and individuals are united and divided - it's all here, the contemporary and urgent questions, perennial concerns made vivid and visceral.

In Damascus, Tsiolkas has written a masterpiece of imagination and transformation: an historical novel of immense power and an unflinching dissection of doubt and faith, tyranny and revolution, and cruelty and sacrifice.

©2019 Christos Tsiolkas (P)2019 Bolinda Publishing
Fiction Historical Fiction Literary Fiction
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Horrific and graphic

Probably true to life, with good performance, but too horrific and graphic for me. I think we can be made aware of sex and violence without having detailed discriptions of it. I'm disappointed as the subject matter really interests me, but I was unable to get beyond the first few chapters.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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narration/characterization is awful

the narration takes so much of the meaning from this book. it made it so hard to continue with it. the voices of the women in this book are awful caricatures, reducing the meaning of the words.

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