
Reviewer & Author Interviewer, Norm Goldman. Norm is the Publisher & Editor of Bookpleasures.com.
He has been reviewing books for the past twenty years after retiring from the legal profession.
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Author: Rob Levinson
Publisher: Black Leper Books
ISBN: 978-1-77302-279-6
Author: Rob Levinson
Publisher: Black LeperBooks
ISBN: 978-1-77302-279-6
When I picked up a copy of Rob Levinson's The Leper
Messiah, I was reminded of my first encounter with the story of
David while studying the Book of Samuel at a Hebrew parochial school
“many moons ago.” It is here where I learned of God's choice of
David to replace Saul as king of Israel and his subsequent
establishment of the Judahite Kingdom. Yet, did I really know and
understand David 's humble beginnings, his complex character, his
pragmatism, his loyalty, his faith, his transgressions, and his
flaws. Did I have any understanding as to what really made him “tick”
and charismatic? These were
themes that were never fully explored by my teachers. Perhaps,
because I was too young to fully understand the depth of David's
character, his conflicts, his villainous behavior, his fornication
with Bat Sheba, and the ordering of her husband Uriah to be sent to
die at war, that they were ignored?
Now along comes
Levinson's novel of this fascinating character, which, according to
its author, was inspired from the time he had been a young lad
driving a tractor and gathering cotton in the field surrounding
Kibbutz Sede Nahum, Israel. It was here that he read about Mount
Gilboa, where King Saul and his son Jonathan were killed, and as he
quotes David, “Oh, how have the mighty fallen.” He goes onto to
say that he was entranced with David's story and even imagined
himself “one of his outlaws, traveling with him on his journeys
through Judah and Israel, gathering food, wine, and adventure like so
many leaves on a fig tree.” As Levinson states, it was not so much
that he wanted to tell the story of the mighty King David, but rather
“the outcast, the troubled one, the desperate David” that filled
him with wonder. With this in mind, Levinson has produced a
fast-paced, intricately plotted tale that uses as its springboard the
Book of Samuel. And to add an extra dimension, Levinson
cleverly incorporates the tools of metaphor, symbolism, and
mysticism, which enhances the story with more depth and color drawing
in his readers and keeping them hooked.
Levinson lures his
readers to travel with him into the past examining David's life as a
young lad from the small town of Bethlehem, in the land of Judah.
David, who was the youngest in his family, was shy, afraid of
his brothers and torn by his father Jesse's disdain. And from his
earliest days, he felt like an outcast and “it became a mantle he
wore like a brand that was burned into his very being. This was all
he ever knew and it shaped his world.” We can feel his pain being
“banished from his father's love, banishment from brother's love,
this is pain.” If we are to describe the novel as merely historical
fiction, we would not do it justice, thus depriving it of its
individuality. What Levinson has accomplished is a form of realism
which makes its biblical setting as immediate, vivid, and chaotic, as
anything set in the present.
Several themes are touched upon
including the strong women in David's life such as his mother
Nitzevet and the supernatural Rose, who has a knack of appearing in
pivotal moments in his life destroying anyone who dares to harm
David. There is also King Saul's jealousy of David while serving in
his army forcing him into hiding and finding asylum with Achish, the
ruler of Gath. We also read about the true bond between David and
Saul's son Jonathan,which proved itself, even in the most difficult
of times.
Towards the end of the novel, Levinson succinctly
sums it all up as follows: “he had to fight for everything or take
it by force or sometimes charm. He learned quickly to survive in each
situation, what mask to wear and when what to say and how to say it.
He was gifted and realized at a young age that he could receive
things with his natural ability to charm. He did not have to play a
heavy role as a gentle way would deliver twice as much to his
cause.”
The novel is not without its shortcomings,
particularly the lack of smooth transitions between one chapter and
the next, the popping in and out of characters with little
introductions that I needed a scorecard to keep tab. Nonetheless,
there is still a great deal to chew on that in a way doesn't
trivialize David or his emotions. We have a fascinating, mysterious,
and complex creation, all the more attractive for being flawed. And
although, he is someone we don't especially like, yet we still admire
him for his achievement in uniting his people.
FOLLOW HERE TO READ NORM'S INTERVIEW WITH ROB LEVINSON