The Kingdom (Carrère novel)

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The Kingdom
Author
ISBN
978-2-8180-2118-7

The Kingdom (French: Le Royaume) is a 2014 novel by the French writer Emmanuel Carrère.

Plot

Set toward the end of the 1st century, the story follows Luke and other members of a marginal and apocalyptic Jewish sect. Luke gets to know Paul, investigates the group's executed founder and ends up writing the Acts of the Apostles, the Gospel of Luke and most of the Catholic epistles.[1]

Reception

Tim Whitmarsh wrote in The Guardian that the book is scandalous, not for its treatment of sexual themes or use of Biblical scholarship, but for the "relentless narcissism" Carrère shows when he uses early Christianity as a parable for his own life as an author. Whitmarsh called it a "complex, intellectual but compelling book" that also contains wit, self-criticism and humility.[1] Michael Sonnenschein of Bookforum called it "a weird, brilliant hybrid of biblical interpretation, memoir, and historical fiction in which Carrère scrutinizes his own wavering Catholic faith", writing that it is brash in parts, but because of that participates in a long tradition of Christian spiritual memoirs "in a wildly contemporary, self-conscious way".[2] The book was also reviewed in The Irish Times[3] and The Financial Times.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Whitmarsh, Tim (24 February 2017). "The Kingdom by Emmanuel Carrère review – the man who invented Jesus". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 October 2023.
  2. ^ Sonnenschein, Michael (11 December 2017). "The Kingdom by Emmanuel Carrère". Bookforum. Retrieved 24 October 2023.
  3. ^ "The Kingdom review: The gospel according to Emmanuel Carrère". The Irish Times. Retrieved 2023-10-25.
  4. ^ Cornwell, John (2017-03-03). "The Kingdom by Emmanuel Carrère — a religious journey". Financial Times. Retrieved 2023-10-25.

External links