Reading Genesis
Marilynne Robinson. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $29 (352p) ISBN 978-0-374-29940-8
Novelist Robinson (The Death of Adam) offers a dense yet immersive close reading of the book of Genesis. Employing literary and theological lenses, the author frames the biblical book as an exemplary narrative and the figures within it as characters with agency, motive, and backstory. For example, Jacob is a trickster who schemes with his mother to steal his brother’s blessing, while his “young, bright, and self-infatuated” son, Joseph, proves “blind or indifferent to the resentment that is stirring around him... in literary terms, a great character.” Writing that “the text perfected very early the art of showing rather than telling,” Robinson skillfully melds her literary interpretation with her theological one, offering a Christian Calvinist reading that centers God’s goodness and grace (“Grace modifies law. Law cannot limit grace”). From that theological stance, she explores God’s willingness to form a covenant—and generally put up—with imperfect humans, his “too-brilliant creatures.” Like the biblical book it explicates, Robinson’s offering is demanding, intense, and best read slowly. Patient readers will be rewarded. Agent: Ellen Levine, Trident Media Group. (Mar.)
Details
Reviewed on: 10/23/2023
Genre: Religion
Hardcover - 352 pages - 978-0-7710-1496-3
Hardcover - 978-0-349-01874-4
Paperback - 352 pages - 978-1-250-37185-0
Paperback - 978-0-349-01876-8
Paperback - 978-0-349-01875-1