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Drawing in the Dust

by Zoe Klein

ZOA KLEIN pursued the rabbinate out of a passion for ancient texts, mythology, liturgy and poetry. ZoA Klein has written for "Harper's Bazaar," "Glamour, "and "Tikkun." She has written chapters in a number of collections including "The Women's Torah Commentary" and "Holy Ground: A Gathering of Voices on Caring for Creation." Her poetry and prayers are used in houses of worship around the country and has appeared as a commentator on the History Channel in ?Digging for the Truth.? She lives with her family, where she is the senior rabbi of a large congregation.

FORMAT
Paperback
LANGUAGE
English
CONDITION
Brand New


Publisher Description

UNFORGETTABLE DEBUT NOVEL IS A RICHLY EVOCATIVE AND BOUNDLESS LOVE STORY THAT REVERBERATES FROM BIBLICAL TIMES TO THE MODERN WORLD.

Brilliant archaeologist Page Brookstone has toiled at Israel's storied battlegrounds of Megiddo for twelve years, yet none of the ancient remnants she has unearthed deliver the life-altering message she craves. Which is why she risks her professional reputation when a young Arab couple begs her to excavate beneath their home. Ibrahim and Naima Barakat claim the spirits of two lovers overwhelm everyone who enters with love and desire. As Page digs, she makes a miraculous discovery—the bones of the deeply troubled prophet Jeremiah locked in an eternal embrace with a mysterious woman. Buried with the entwined skeletons is a collection of scrolls that challenge centuries-old interpretations of the prophet's story and create a worldwide fervor.

Caught in a forbidden romance of her own, and under siege from religious zealots and relentless critics, Page endangers her life to share the lovers' story with the world. But in doing so, she discovers she must let go of her own painful past. Called a "zesty debut" by "Kirkus Reviews, "Zoe Klein's historically rich novel is a lyrical and unexpected journey as poignant and thought-provoking as the beloved bestsellers "The Red Tent "and "People of the Book."

Author Biography

ZO? KLEIN pursued the rabbinate out of a passion for ancient texts, mythology, liturgy and poetry. Zo? Klein has written for"Harper's Bazaar", "Glamour, "and "Tikkun." She has written chapters in a number of collections including "The Women's Torah Commentary" and "Holy Ground: A Gathering of Voices on Caring for Creation". Her poetry and prayers are used in houses of worship around the country and has appeared as a commentator on the History Channel in ?Digging for the Truth.? She lives with her family, where she is the senior rabbi of a large congregation.

Review

"Archaeology is the most dangerous of sciences, fundamentalism the most insidious of religious beliefs, and fiction the most seductive form of writing. Mix all three together, and you have "Drawing in the Dust".... Zoe Klein will rock your foundations! This is what fiction should be about." -- Kathleen O'Neal Gear and W. Michael Gear, "NYT" bestselling authors of "The Betrayal" ""Drawing in the Dust" is original in every sense of the word: creative, innovative, novel. It is an archaeological adventure that resurrects buried romance. With feeling intellect, the author reveals the secret of the heart." -- Rabbi Harold Schulweis, "Author of Conscience: The Duty to Obey and the Duty to Disobey" "A magically inventive archaeological expedition into love's psyche. Rabbi Klein's voice is enormously literate, politically sophisticated, spiritually captivating, and above all, unique." -- Lawrence Kushner, "author of Kabbalah: A Love Story" "Lyrical, transformative, and unexpected, "Drawing" will keep you enthralled in the moment, yet racing to know more." -- Gina B. Nahai, "NYT" bestselling author "of Moonlight on the Avenue of Faith"

Review Quote

"Lyrical, transformative, and unexpected,Drawingwill keep you enthralled in the moment, yet racing to know more." -- Gina B. Nahai,NYTbestselling authorof Moonlight on the Avenue of Faith

Excerpt from Book

Drawing in the Dust I There is no blemish on the glow which surrounds you like a metal shield. But what good is a shield if the hurt is inside?...O Lord, let his heart break and begin to heal rather than this perpetual and terrible swell! --THE SCROLL OF ANATIYA 4:42-47 I always wake before sunrise, at least two hours before any of my three housemates. I sit up in bed and stretch, kick off my covers. The polished limestone floor is cold, sending a shiver from my feet all the way up my spine, and it delights me. The light sifting through the window is soft and inviting, as if the house floats inside a lavender cloud. I pull on shorts, a tank top, and slide my white bandana over my hair. I lather my face, arms, legs with sun lotion. The air has the chill of white wine. I''ve seen sunlamps for people with seasonal depression, so that in the long, dark winters when their sadness peaks, they can replicate bright days and feel healed. I''d rather retire to a room with a gentle moonlamp, whirring metal fan, and dewy humidifier. I pull on my socks, my sneakers. I patter down the hall. The door to our supervisor Norris''s suite is ajar. He always sleeps with it a little open, as if tempting someone to come in. I can see his jeans and belt hanging over the back of his desk chair as I pass by. A picture of Mickey and Orna on their wedding day hangs on their closed door. In the picture Mickey is wearing a light brown suit and lopsided bow tie that look like they and the groom had just arrived in Israel off a boat from Russia, which isn''t too far from the truth. He is bending his voluptuous sabra bride, Orna, a little bit backward, her raven black hair wild with curls, and resting his head just above her cleavage. Mickey always said he fell in love with her because she had the ripest breasts in the Fertile Crescent...and a heart to match. A wooden plaque hangs from their doorknob reading in Hebrew birkat habayit, blessing of the home. I am the house ghost, in a way, spooking my way through the living room. Norris''s leather chair, so out of place in a room of institutional-style furniture, is opened in a reclining position with a thin blanket spread over the arm and a rummaged newspaper at its feet. I can imagine him sitting here, as he often does late at night, drinking tea and watching reruns of Baywatch on Lebanese television. In the kitchen I drink a glass of grapefruit juice. I make a sandwich, roasted eggplant and turkey tucked into pita, and take a canteen of ice out of the freezer, pack them in my knapsack along with my tools, and head to the door. There is a note pinned to the door that reads, P--Dinner with Jerrold March tonight at 8. Prepare to present on shaft tombs.--N. I feel a tide of fury rise in me, not at the idea of dinner with Mr. March, one of our most generous sponsors. I''ve met with him many times whenever I''ve returned to New York, and he is always a perfect gentleman from the tip of his mustache to his deftness with a salad fork, harmlessly flirtatious after a few glasses of wine. It is easy to melt into his luxurious world, and fun to bring him into the world he funds, my dirty world of chamber pots and ceramic coffins. I''m not angry even at Norris''s directive, although I already knew about dinner. I already have sketches to show Jerrold of official seals, basins, statuettes, and ivories, maps indicating where we''d found the three thousand infant burial jars. Norris knows I''m always prepared. We have been working here together for more than a decade. It is that the note is written on the back of the title page of my last book, an act obviously intended to upset me. The page had been crumpled in his most recent fit, and then, I suppose, he smoothed it out to use it as scratch paper. To let me know how little he thinks of it, or me. It''s not worth spending the most beautiful time of the day fuming over him. He''s been playing these games for so many months I''m practically numb to them. When I step outside, closing the door softly behind me, my anger dissolves in the wet, clean, and shimmering air. I love the early morning. Pine trees cast long shadows across the road and clouds stained deep grape and plum are strewn messily over the horizon, as if someone hadn''t yet cleaned up the table linens after a giant party. It is a two-mile walk to the tell. Every working morning I take this walk, leaving my old white Mazda in the driveway like a beached baby beluga. The air is tinged with rosemary, mint, and diesel. I try to drink in the coolness as I walk, knowing the sun will soon sizzle it all to chalk. There is a mist of sparkles over my clothes and my skin. The little hairs on my arms have been alchemized by the sun to fine gold. My naturally pale skin is gilded by exposure, despite my devotion to applying and reapplying lotion. I feel lean and able striding up the road, my mind clear. I enjoy the long stride of my body every morning before settling into a day of crouching in dirt. The Judean Hills lie languid over the horizon and birds are winging between the pines. There is a Bedouin woman pulling up herbs down a stony slope. She is swathed in a long black robe, chanting in Arabic: Fear not if you wander the barley fields after there has been a good rain And you find an old lover who was slain long ago has risen to meet you again. I can see the museum at the bottom of the hill. I''ve been working in Megiddo for twelve years, in the heart of the Jezreel Valley in the north of Israel. Every year nearly four million tourists visit this very place. It is an extraordinary site. Megiddo is a hill that spans about fifteen acres, made up of thirty cities built one on top of the other over six millennia, beginning with the prepottery Neolithic period nine thousand years ago. The wrestlings of my own heart should be overshadowed in this valley of death. At least thirty-four nations have battled in this place, with enormous slaughters. This is where Pharaoh Thutmose III fought the first battle known in recorded history anywhere in the world. The author of the Book of Revelation predicted that in the end of days, the battle between good and evil will ultimately take place here. In fact, the word Armageddon is a corruption of the Hebrew phrase Har Megiddo, Mount of Megiddo. Modern Israel is no stranger to conflict, and one doesn''t have to dig to remember. Every weapon created has been wielded here, and the newest generations, biological and nuclear, hang like Damocles''s sword over the young nation. To stay ahead, defense systems scurry to evolve from the technology of tunnels and walls. I''ve spent my career here underground with the ancients, without emerging much into today''s headlines. I''ve been less interested in the political and religious conflict of any century and more interested in personal practice, mostly studying Middle Bronze Age mortuary practices. In the past, countless have lived, thrived, and then bled here until they became bone. Today, millions come to visit, including historic visits; the first visit of a pope to Israel took place here in Megiddo. Two hundred professionals dig here every working day. Norris directs them all, and I supervise twenty archaeologists and volunteers concentrating on the temples of stratum XV and the elaborate shaft tombs. But each morning, like this one, there is just me. The generations below me are silent, and the tour buses have not yet rumbled in. In the half light, the site is empty. I cross the museum parking lot and begin to climb the tell. The land is perfectly still and mute, guarding its deep treasures of seedlings, cemeteries, and secret gardens. When I dig my callused hands into the cool, predawn earth, I feel all of her richness tingle through my skin. Before dawn the land always seems to yield, hinting that, with just the right touch, everything dormant in her might awaken, push through its black chambers, and Ezekiel''s field of bones would drink the moist sky. I walk through the remains of Solomon''s stables, the rows of dark cold arches. I imagine the din of whinnying and neighing echoing through the ancient hall. Sparse, thorny grasses and sharp foliage poke through the stones. As I emerge from the maze of stables, the horizon wears a crown. The sun is just rising. I kneel beside my most recent project, the three thousand and seventy-second infant burial jar we''ve unearthed. I put down my knapsack and unroll my pack of tools: a small pickax, a toothbrush, variously sized paintbrushes, and fine dental tools. The jar is shaped like a womb, the corpse inside curled toward the entry. How disappointing for them to be delivered not by some messiah to life everlasting but by me, to a mention in my field notes. I begin to gently dust the rim of the jar, thinking. It is hard for me to believe that I am thirty-nine years old. Looking at the swollen shape of the jar, I involuntarily draw my hand over my stomach. I used to wonder what it would be like to be round and full like that instead of empty, flat. To carry life inside me. I don''t think about it much anymore. I have never gotten myself tested to see if I have the Lou Gehrig''s gene like my father, like my grandfather. I tremble at the thought of bequeathing my fear to another, if not my child, then his or hers, a Damocles sword over all my generations. And at the same time... I sigh. The sky that had sagged so sweetly, as if the Kingdom of Heaven''s doormat was just within reach, is pinned back into place by a fiery th

Details

ISBN1416599134
Author Zoe Klein
Short Title DRAWING IN THE DUST
Language English
ISBN-10 1416599134
ISBN-13 9781416599135
Media Book
Format Paperback
DEWEY FIC
Year 2010
Country of Publication United States
Pages 360
Place of Publication New York
Publisher Gallery Books
Imprint Simon Spotlight Entertainment
Audience General/Trade
Publication Date 2010-05-04
NZ Release Date 2010-05-04
US Release Date 2010-05-04
UK Release Date 2010-05-04
AU Release Date 2010-07-06

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