Arab press
Newer Entries »A Remarkable Holiday gift chronicles the Flight into Egypt
Monday, November 25th, 2013
Whether the object of your affection is Christian, Jewish, Muslim–or none of the above–The Cairo Codex is the perfect holiday gift. This riveting historical novel explores the world of Egypt in the year 2 and modern times. The codex discovered by anthropologist Justine Jenner is found to be the diary of Mary of Nazareth, mother of Jesus. The compelling first-person account sets forth the illuminating struggles and strengths of women through the ages and answers haunting questions: Why did the flight into Egypt really happen? Who was Mary and how did she become literate? If she was the primary teacher of her remarkable son, how did she teach reflection and social values? What would current day Christians and Muslim do to keep such a diary from coming to light? Discover these answers and more in this provocative new novel. Linda Lambert
Tags: Christian, codex, discovery, Egypt, history, Jesus, Jewish, Muslim, Virgin Mary
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Arriving Home…Cultural Re-entry
Monday, November 18th, 2013
I remember arriving home in the early nineties in California after living in Cairo for two years. It is very expensive and complicated in the U.S: utility deposits, insurance, relationships. The most difficult part was moving from the unfamiliar, the exotic, to the familiar, the mundane. In Cairo, the air bristled with sensuality, tension, unknown dangers. In a foreign culture, one’s identity is as one would wish it.
Coming home was culture shock in reverse. I was depressed—and stayed that way for the better part of a year. Until I returned to Cairo the next spring.
Returning home from Taos this fall has some of the same elements. I realize this time that an essential part of the intrigue of another culture is history. Ten thousand years of history in Egypt, 500 years of history in Taos.
No doubt, this is why I enjoy writing historical fiction so much…it anchors me in the ethereal, the unfamiliar, creating the necessity of building new theories from history. Placing my characters in context.
Yet, as I write this post, I am staring up into our redwood forest here in The Sea Ranch. Thousands of years of natural history. A blend all worlds. Snap out of it, Linda.
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Norman Mailer calls it “Faction”
Tuesday, October 29th, 2013
Having now written three historical novels—the third in manuscript form: A Rapture of Ravens: Awakening in Taos—readers pose the inevitably question: What part is fact? What part fiction? Mailer calls this finely blended potion, “Faction,” composed of “fact” and “fiction.” As he phrased it: that “hybrid of documented fact and novelistic elaboration.”
It puzzles me as well. Let me just say that I know the difference–most of the time. (My husband, Morgan, playfully accuses me of not being sure where that line is.) In each of the novels….here is what is true, or true as commonly believed and practiced:
• the history and historical characters
• religious beliefs, rituals, and institutions
• political themes and issues
• cuisine, arts, and entertainment
• geography, locales, plants, animals
• climate, including many extremes
• many of the current characters—and those I clarify in author’s notes
For instance: In The Cairo Codex, the crypt under St. Sergius Church was once a cave and considered a stopping place for the Holy Family, or believed so by many…but whether there was a codex hidden in those ancient walls…ummmmm.
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Arab-Israeli Conversation with author Daniel Jacobs
Wednesday, September 25th, 2013
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Arab Press reviews The Cairo Codex
Wednesday, August 28th, 2013
The Cairo Codex
This page-turner will keep you on the edge of your seat!
Dr. Justine Jenner, an anthropologist and daughter of an Egyptian mother and an American archeologist father is sent to Cairo to work on a UNESCO Community Schools for Girls program.
Before she can even begin her assignment, she is nearly buried in the crypt of St. Sergius Church when an earthquake hits. She is rescued but shaken and doesn’t realize until later that – in collecting her things in the subsequent blackout – she has inadvertently grasped an ancient codex (the stage between scrolls and books). The crypt is believed to have been the cave home of the Holy Family during their stay in Egypt to escape Herod’s armies. When carbon dating is performed on the codex and a team of scholars examines it, they determine it to be the diary of the Virgin Mary.
The book moves back and forth between Justine’s time and that of Mary as we read her diary. The contents of the codex are so startling to both Christian and Muslim faiths that their disclosure might trigger violent reactions. The Muslim Brotherhood is further provoked to action as it prepares to take over the political reins of the country.
This discovery will challenge accepted belief in history and religion. It will also raise questions of just how much knowledge the world deserves – or is prepared – to receive.
The Cairo Codex is the first in what will be The Justine Trilogy.
-review by Arab Vistas Today
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