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Another thing about the novel was that I just didn't find it all that gripping. It flowed along fine, but unfortunately it didn't make me want to stay up passed by bed time and continue reading it.
In love with Jacob but realizing that he's barely noticed her, Leah takes desperate measures and pulls the world's most famous bed trick. With Jacob believing himself finally in bed with Leah's younger sister, the beautiful Rachel, they consumate their marriage and when the morning light comes Jacob finds that he is saddled with a woman he doesn't love - although in time he gets his Rachel as well.
Leah consoles herself with the knowledge that she is the mother of Jacob's sons, with Rachel apparently barren. But then the long-awaited Joseph is born, and Leah must bear the disinheritance of her eldest son, goodhearted Reuben, who has done nothing wrong except to not be Rachel's (the Bilhah scandal is never mentioned, which is a shame as it would have been interesting to see Leah's reaction to Reuben's one major moral lapse). Leah must draw on inner strength and God to deal with the difficult times that follow, including the Shechem massacre and it's aftermath, a sickening suspicion that her sons had something to do with Joseph's death (and this version ends grimly, as Leah did not live long enough, as Jacob did, to find out that Reuben saved Joseph by suggesting he be thrown into a well instead of killed outright) - and, always, the knowledge that Jacob will always love Rachel more than her.
It is not until the end of her life that Jacob shows Leah that he has noticed how she has been the glue that binds the family together and how much her intelligent advice has meant to him, even if it was Rachel's bed he went to most nights. And, of course, it is Leah - not Rachel - who is honored with a place in Jesus' ancestry.
Shott keeps the novel in historical perspective, not trying to modernize the morality of biblical times. He also intriguingly picks up on the Bible's mention of Leah's bad eyesight and vividly describes what it must be like to live in a world where you have to ask someone to tell you what's going on if it's more than a few feet from you.
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As it opens, Leah's misgivings have proven all too warranted. Jacob's blatant favoritism, Joseph's arrogance and the murderous anger of her sons have finally all combined for trouble. Reuben, as Leah predicted too soft natured to keep his brothers in hand, is able to prevent bloodshed but not Joseph's sale into slavery. So begins the wonderful story of Joseph's transformation from spoiled brat to slave to prisoner to the second most powerful man in Egypt and, finally, a reconciliation with his brothers.
Unlike Leah, this is fairly familiar territory but worth a read if like me you love the story. And it includes the zinger at the end of the story that we all tend to forget - that it was Judah and not Joseph whose line carried the Promise - a reminder never to get too cocky even when you're God's golden child.
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