Showing posts with label Tessa Afshar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tessa Afshar. Show all posts

Thursday, August 28, 2014

Tessa Afshar


Dear Readers,

Tessa Afshar leapt to the top of the Biblical fiction genre a few short years ago with Pearl in the Sand.  Plain and simply I was drawn to that book because of who the main character was, Rahab.  Since then I have enjoyed Tessa’s other books that have been releasing.  She has a way of writing a story based on a Biblical character that makes the whole story come to life.   Ones that I have read or heard about for years, but for some reason when I get done reading Tessa’s book it feels like they are now friends and their story has become so familiar it was like a friend had shared it.

bakerbookstore.comIn the Field of Grace Tessa bring the story of Ruth and Naomi to life.  Ruth has followed her mother-in-law to Naomi’s homeland.  It's a place with unfamiliar people and customs to Ruth. They have no men to take care of them, no money and no family, what will the two women do?  They return to Naomi’s home to rebuild and to hopefully eek out a living gathering the leftovers from a distant relative's fields.   

Being a foreigner and a woman to boot, Ruth finds herself the subject of ridicule from the others, that is until she catches the eye of the owner and he demands that the others leave her alone.  Who is this person and why is he suddenly interested in her?  Boaz knows better, but his heart tells him otherwise.

This story that is one that most people know by heart.  The story of a woman who sacrifices it all to go live with her mother-in-law, a woman that Ruth owes nothing to, because she is young enough to marry again and really has no reason to take care of her dead husband's mother.  She has no tradition that tells her to take care of Naomi and yet she does.

I know as a kid hearing Ruth’s story, I thought she must have been perfect and how happy and content she was to do all the things she did.  Tessa makes the point of not writing Ruth as perfect, but a woman who is doing what she feels is correct for a woman she has come to love.  It doesn’t mean she isn't frightened or that everything goes smoothly, but she continues on ahead and find the desires of her heart. 

Tessa does a great job of making Ruth a person who is human, not the perfect person that is sometimes written about in other fictional stories.  She's someone you would like to meet at a local coffee shop and get to know better.
 
Happy Reading, 

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Tessa Afshar

Dear Readers,
Biblical fiction is a tough genre to write in. Some people won't read it because you are "changing the Bible." Some people won't read it because "I have already read that story." I struggle with it because it can be so boring as some writers will just rewrite the Bible story with no changes to it and then expect us readers to like it.
The Biblical fiction I do like is because of the face it puts on the characters involved and brings the actually Bible story to life. Pearl in the Sand by Tessa Afshar is that type of book for me. It really made me think more about Rahab and her story. Questions like, why was she a prostitute and what was she really like? came to mind.
The cover is what actually got me curious about this book in the first place but the subject matter is what made me want to read it. Rahab is one of only five women mentioned in Jesus' lineage. What earned her that right? It also made me realise that Jesus was not ashamed to mention her in his lineage.
Rahab was sold into prostitution by her father. It was a time of drought and famine in Jericho and her family was starving. They didn't see any other way to survive. In the years to follow Rahab continued on in the lifestyle that was chosen for her mostly because she figures no one else would want her anyways. That is until she hears about a country and their God who is laying waste to any country that stands against them. Bigger, stronger countries. The scarest thing is Jericho and Canaan are in the sights next.
I have often wondered why Rahab would betray her country. I am sure there was no great love for her country, but treason? Wow. But why? It had to have been a God thing. He knew the plans he had for her long before she even knew that He exsisted.
Once that country had destroyed her homeland why would she want to join them? They had killed off everyone and only saved her and her family because of a promise made to a couple of spies. Why trust them and why did they accept her?
Rahab's story is one of God's pursuit of us no matter what we have done, how he will and does use all of us and mostly it is the story of His forgiveness and love for us.
Happy Reading