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The Gilded Chamber: A Novel of Queen Esther…
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The Gilded Chamber: A Novel of Queen Esther (édition 2005)

par Rebecca Kohn

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4851651,122 (3.47)22
In the Bestselling tradition of The Red Tent, a dazzling novel of the extraordinary biblical heroine who ascended to the position of queen and sacrificed love in exchange for the lives of her people. The story of Esther-- whose mesmerizing beauty was matched only by her clear-eyed wisdom-- has inspired women for centuries. Now her suspenseful tale comes to life through the eyes of a contemporary woman, debut novelist Rebecca Kohn. Capturing the passionate longings and political danger that have made Esther's legacy so timeless, The Gilded Chamber blends meticulous research with gripping storytelling to transport us to an ancient time in the far-flung Persian Empire. Orphaned and terrified, Esther journeys across the River Tigris to start a new life with her cousin-- a man well positioned in the court, and to whom she is betrothed. Her transformation from girl to woman unfolds against a lavish backdrop of the royal court and harem, rife with intrigue and daring alliances. Esther wins much of what she seeks: the heart of a king, and the deliverance of her people. But her rise to the role of queen is not without a price; she must turn her back on all that she ever wanted, and give her body to a man she can never love. In a haunting, unflinching voice, The Gilded Chamber illuminates an epic dilemma between the yearnings of a woman's heart and the obligations imposed on her by fate. In Esther's case, choice makes history-- and unforgettable reading… (plus d'informations)
Membre:EdinaMonsoon
Titre:The Gilded Chamber: A Novel of Queen Esther
Auteurs:Rebecca Kohn
Info:Penguin (Non-Classics) (2005), Paperback, 384 pages
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The Gilded Chamber par Rebecca Kohn

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I read this quite a long time ago. The author retells the tale of Jewish heroine Esther, who first became the concubine, and later the wife, of Persian King Xerxes, and the sacrifices this brave woman took on to help save her people. This novel brings new depth to the story of this legendary biblical queen. It does contain graphic sex scenes……. ( )
  mazda502001 | Oct 17, 2022 |
Quick moving story - not overly obsessed with any particular moment or description. Just enough to paint a great picture and keep me turning the pages as quickly as I could to see what the next page would bring! ( )
  lissabeth21 | Oct 3, 2017 |
I didn't expect much from this book. Stories based on the Bible tend to turn out either as extremely liberal interpretations that bear little resemblance to anything that would have been written in those times, or over-faithful recreations of the exact scenes with the exact words used in the Bible that leave one wondering, why not just read the original? I won't say that The Gilded Chamber is a perfect balance of new and old, because it isn't. But it comes closer than any I have found so far and gives me hope that the genre really might be improving.

SPOILERS SPOILERS SPOILERS FROM HERE ON



What I liked:
The sense of place was good without being overwhelming. The author does not get bogged down in historical details at the expense of the story, but the history seems pretty good from what I can remember (Persia is not my area of expertise by a long shot).

Hadassah/Esther is actually pretty believable. In times of trouble there is always that one who swallows their fear and anguish until a time when it can be safely released and steps up as a uniter, a comforter, a leader. Such people are few and far between, but they do exist in real life. I have met them. And as Hadassah/Esther feels plenty of insecurities and uncertainties, has nightmares, weaknesses, and terrible regrets, I cannot call her a Mary Sue. I think this is probably as close as you could get to the character of the Biblical Esther without actually meeting her in real life, which would require a time machine or something.

Mordechai/Marduka was interesting because he shows a Jew who, like Esther, has nearly forgotten his heritage in his ambition to serve the king and climb the greasy pole. By the middle, however, he has regained his faith and openly admitted his Jewish ancestry, putting himself in peril. I wish he had been a little more 3-dimensional, though. (I'll put more about that in "What I Disliked)."

Xerxes was depicted as being about a big a jerk as you would expect based on history and the Biblical story itself. While Esther at first develops a wild lust for him, and for years tries to mentally mold him into a proper object for her love, she is never really able to do so. Which leads to...

This isn't a sappy love story. It is a story of survival.

The "One Night with the King" isn't glossed over as a time to chat over tea and show off one's wits. For the first time that I have ever encountered, the true nature of that night is made clear, though...
The sexuality is overt throughout but never very graphic. The author actually trusts us to be smart enough to know what is happening and doesn't spell everything out. A rare quality in a book today. Still more sexual content than many I know will be okay with, though, so I can't loan it to my mother.

What I didn't like:
Too many flashbacks to her parents and their deaths. We get it, okay?

Most of the characters are completely 2-dimensional, even characters that were important enough to warrant in-depth characterization. Why does Haman want to kill all of the Jews and murder the king? Ambition. That's it. He's just all evilness and ambition, and the same goes for his wife. To me this story would have benefited from a more well-rounded villain, but alas, we do not get one.

Maybe it's just me, but I would have liked to see Queen Vashti treated as a normal woman who just didn't obey one stupid order from her husband and got severely punished for it. Instead, she is an evil harpy who sends curses from afar and leaves death threats scrawled into walls, then sends her creepy little man in a boy suit to seduce his half sister and kill the king. It's just too much. At least Esther is smart enough to realize that she could easily be treated as Vashti was at any time.

I couldn't help but find it a little too convenient that Esther is put immediately into a group of friends and servants that contain so many Jews.

Marduka/Mordechai was a disappointment overall. While his betrothal to Esther at a very early age at least explains why she is with him to begin with, she has more to do with his servant and just about every other character in the book than with him. Yet she maintains a longing for him throughout the book and continues wishing to be his wife even though it is clear that he would have married her if that was his wish. He doesn't say a word when she is kidnapped to become a concubine; basically he doesn't seem to care what happens to her at all.

When Queen Esther ran out into the street, where Mordechai was publicly pouring ashes onto his head, in order to plead with him to just bow to Haman, it was just not realistic at all. She is always lamenting that she cannot escape her confines in the palace, so it's pretty hard to believe that she can somehow escape just at this important moment and ally herself with this condemned Jew with everyone watching, but with no one remembering any of that later. I think it would've been quite the scene in real life and word of it would have been everywhere.

I felt that, after all of this, there should be a clear ending even though the Bible does not have what became of Esther after the assassination, but we don't really get that.

Finally, I guess I would say that this version leans a little too close to the strict interpretation of the Bible end of things. It is still an interesting quick read, but I think a little more deviation from the text could have fleshed things out a bit. I would definitely read another book by the same author, though. She seems to be a talent to watch! ( )
  aurelas | Jan 19, 2017 |
The story of Esther is told as if we could see her daily worries, the trials she faced in Xerxes royal sphere...but this removed all the inspiration from the tale. She wasn't especially strong, faithful, beautiful, perhaps she was described as humble as in the Bible. It was depressing and sad. A little too much realism for me while still being unrealistic...if that makes sense. ( )
  EhEh | Apr 3, 2013 |
It may be that with a star and a half I'm being too generous, but then having tried this novel of Queen Esther after the eye-bleedingly awful The Other Boleyn Girl, this didn't seem so wretched in comparison. Which doesn't mean it's good, and it didn't hold my interest and only its appearance on a historical fiction recommendation list caused me to give it over 50 pages.

I wasn't taken with the style at all. For one, this is first person, yet early on she's telling us of scenes in the palace with Xerxes she couldn't have witnessed--yes, I know, they could have been reported to her the way the doings of say Bush's or Obama's cabinet meetings are reported to those of us who have never seen the inside of the White House, but it seemed jarring. Then there were the flashbacks done in eye-straining italics--always to me an amateurish move, as if stupid font tricks will drape gauze before our eyes. Kohn also went well over her quota in exclamation points and her dialogue was graceless.

Finally, the author's Esther struck me as vapid, especially in her devotion to the spineless Mordecai her betrothed (and uncle!) Yes, I know, this wasn't a modern woman, but one raised in a patriarchal culture. That didn't stop Diamant (whose Red Tent this novel was compared to on the cover) from making her heroine a compelling figure without feeling anachronistic. But then Diamant can write... ( )
  LisaMaria_C | Feb 25, 2011 |
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It came to pass in the second year of the reign of Xerxes—who ruled from Hindush to Kusha—that I was orphaned.
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In the Bestselling tradition of The Red Tent, a dazzling novel of the extraordinary biblical heroine who ascended to the position of queen and sacrificed love in exchange for the lives of her people. The story of Esther-- whose mesmerizing beauty was matched only by her clear-eyed wisdom-- has inspired women for centuries. Now her suspenseful tale comes to life through the eyes of a contemporary woman, debut novelist Rebecca Kohn. Capturing the passionate longings and political danger that have made Esther's legacy so timeless, The Gilded Chamber blends meticulous research with gripping storytelling to transport us to an ancient time in the far-flung Persian Empire. Orphaned and terrified, Esther journeys across the River Tigris to start a new life with her cousin-- a man well positioned in the court, and to whom she is betrothed. Her transformation from girl to woman unfolds against a lavish backdrop of the royal court and harem, rife with intrigue and daring alliances. Esther wins much of what she seeks: the heart of a king, and the deliverance of her people. But her rise to the role of queen is not without a price; she must turn her back on all that she ever wanted, and give her body to a man she can never love. In a haunting, unflinching voice, The Gilded Chamber illuminates an epic dilemma between the yearnings of a woman's heart and the obligations imposed on her by fate. In Esther's case, choice makes history-- and unforgettable reading

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