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In the Bestselling tradition of The Red Tent, a dazzling novel of the extraordinary biblical heroine who ascended to the position of queen and sacrificed love in exchange for the lives of her people.
In this measured, eloquent retelling of Jewish heroine Esther's rise from orphanhood to queen of the Persian empire, Kohn brings psychological nuance and stately elegance to the ancient biblical tale that is the basis for the Jewish holiday of Purim. Narrating in the first person, Esther (born Hadassah) tells how she is forcibly taken from her home to the royal harem of King Xerxes in Babylon. Her uncle Mordechai, a high-ranking treasury official in the king's service, warns her, "Do not reveal your people or your kindred.... Let yourself be known only as Esther, foster daughter of Marduka the Babylonian." The novel is by and large faithful to the biblical account and often quotes from it verbatim. Yet Kohn deftly fills the gaps and resolves the ambiguities in the Book of Esther with creative storytelling and historical research. As Esther recognizes her strengths and responsibilities and learns the ways of the palace, so do we; the oppressive closeness of the harem ("the lingering odors of perfume, food, and lamp oil"), the pervasive abuse, the fragile alliances and deadly schemes all come to life. Kohn's Esther has a will of steel and knows how to manipulate lusty, impetuous Xerxes, but she longs for a simpler life. Her sacrifices are finally rewarded when the king's trusted courtier Haman issues a decree ordering the slaughter of the Jews, and Esther is in a position to be able to save her people. Though the novel's pace slows at times, Kohn paints a convincing, complex picture of Esther, and her descriptions of the palace and its secrets will hold readers spellbound. Agent, Esther Sung. Author tour. (Apr. 2) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsRebecca Kohn lives in Hanover, New Hampshire, with her husband and daughter. The Gilded Chamber is her first novel.
Number of Reviews: 12
Average Rating:
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Write a Review
NOT THAT GOOD
JUST A READER, somebody who loves reading, 12/26/2007
I really thought this was going to be a good read. How wrong I was! Esther is just a caricature. The characters are one-dimensional and the whole book felt repetitive.
Recommended !!
A reviewer, Enjoys biblical fiction, 03/12/2006
You will travel back in time and feel as if you are living the life of Queen Esther. A heartfelt and engaging human story. You will not be disappointed.
Also recommended: The Red Tent, Zipporah, Wife of Moses.
More Customer ReviewsBarnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers
A beloved biblical heroine, Queen Esther is joyfully remembered on the Jewish holiday of Purim for bravely revealing her Jewish heritage and saving her people from destruction. Now debut novelist Kohn probes the details of this cherished tale, and unveils a story both more sinister and more complex than readers of the Book of Esther ever realized.
Kohn's tension-filled prose reflects the dangers of the ancient Persian Empire and describes how a young Esther is brought to her cousin's home after being orphaned. Her intended husband, Mordechai, is charged with her care until she's old enough to wed, but thus far he has hidden his Jewish identity to procure an esteemed position in the king's court. And when Esther is captured to serve as a concubine for the king, Mordechai informs her that she must never let anyone know she's a Jew.
The Gilded Chamber is not just a Jewish story but a human one, as Esther grapples with the need to hide her identity. By refusing to acknowledge her heritage, she helps Mordechai retain his position, improves the lives of the women in the harem, and eventually rises to become the queen. But her silence is emotionally painful to keep, and it becomes indefensible when the evil courtier Haman proposes the killing of the Jewish people. (Summer 2004 Selection)
The story of Estherwhose mesmerizing beauty was matched only by her clear-eyed wisdomhas inspired women for centuries. Now her suspenseful tale comes to life through the eyes of a contemporary woman, debut novelist Rebecca Kohn. Capturing the passionate longings and political danger that have made Esther's legacy so timeless, The Gilded Chamber blends meticulous research with gripping storytelling to transport us to an ancient time in the far-flung Persian Empire.
Orphaned and terrified, Esther journeys across the River Tigris to start a new life with her cousina man well postioned in the court, and to whom she is betrothed. Her transformation from girl to woman unfolds against a lavish backdrop of the royal court and harem, rife with intrigue and daring alliances. Esther wins much of what she seeks: the heart of a king, and the deliverance of her people. But her rise to the role of queen is not without a price; she must turn her back on all that she ever wanted, and give her body to a man she can never love.
In a haunting, unflinching voice, The Gilded Chamber illuminates an epic dilemma between the yearnings of a woman's heart and the obligations imposed on her by fate. In Esther's case, choice makes historyand unforgettable reading.
About the Author:
Rebecca Kohn lives in Hanover, New Hampshire, with her husband and daughter. The Gilded Chamber is her first novel.
In this measured, eloquent retelling of Jewish heroine Esther's rise from orphanhood to queen of the Persian empire, Kohn brings psychological nuance and stately elegance to the ancient biblical tale that is the basis for the Jewish holiday of Purim. Narrating in the first person, Esther (born Hadassah) tells how she is forcibly taken from her home to the royal harem of King Xerxes in Babylon. Her uncle Mordechai, a high-ranking treasury official in the king's service, warns her, "Do not reveal your people or your kindred.... Let yourself be known only as Esther, foster daughter of Marduka the Babylonian." The novel is by and large faithful to the biblical account and often quotes from it verbatim. Yet Kohn deftly fills the gaps and resolves the ambiguities in the Book of Esther with creative storytelling and historical research. As Esther recognizes her strengths and responsibilities and learns the ways of the palace, so do we; the oppressive closeness of the harem ("the lingering odors of perfume, food, and lamp oil"), the pervasive abuse, the fragile alliances and deadly schemes all come to life. Kohn's Esther has a will of steel and knows how to manipulate lusty, impetuous Xerxes, but she longs for a simpler life. Her sacrifices are finally rewarded when the king's trusted courtier Haman issues a decree ordering the slaughter of the Jews, and Esther is in a position to be able to save her people. Though the novel's pace slows at times, Kohn paints a convincing, complex picture of Esther, and her descriptions of the palace and its secrets will hold readers spellbound. Agent, Esther Sung. Author tour. (Apr. 2) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
In her debut novel, Kohn has rediscovered one of the best-loved women of the Old Testament. According to that book, Esther was orphaned at the age of ten and sent to live with her cousin and betrothed, Mordechai, a treasury official in the Babylonian court of Xerxes. Later abducted and brought to court as a concubine to the king, Esther became a favorite and then a queen-but with much politicking and heartbreak. Kohn's Esther is similar to the one in the Bible: a woman of great beauty, passion, loyalty, and courage who manages to save the Jews from extermination. Without sacrificing any of the biblical story's narrative, the author has fleshed out a world where intrigue, power, politics, and sensuality rule the day. Fans of Orson Scott Card's Sarah and Anita Diamant's The Red Tent have a new author to follow in Kohn.-Jane Baird, Anchorage Municipal Libs., AK Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
A debut written in the voice of Esther, the Jewish heroine who became Queen of Persia and saved her people from destruction by the villainous Lord Haman. Esther (considered by rabbinic tradition as one of the four most beautiful women in history) was born to a family of devout Jews, in Babylon, in the fifth century b.c., betrothed early on to her cousin Mordecai, and orphaned at the age of ten. After her parents' death, she was sent to live with Mordecai, a high treasury official serving King Xerxes, in the Persian city of Susa. Mordecai once saved Xerxes' life and enjoys royal favor as a result; nevertheless, he feels obliged to conceal his Judaism and instructs Esther to do the same. When Xerxes' wife, Queen Vashti, defies the king in public, she is banished, and royal agents scour the country to find a maiden to replace her. Esther is abducted, imprisoned in the royal harem, and eventually chosen by Xerxes as his new queen. In the meantime, Xerxes' wicked prime minister, Haman, plots to overcome Mordecai (his rival for the king's favor) by inciting the king to issue a decree ordering the execution of all Jews-beginning with Mordecai. Esther, telling the king that she too is a Jew, protects her people by exposing the treason behind Haman's plots. Eventually, Haman is hanged from the very gallows that had been built for Mordecai, and Esther lives happily ever after as the most honored woman in the realm. Kohn keeps her narrative closely in line with the biblical account but fleshes out the story, offering a deliberately provocative sketch of the daily life of women in the ancient world. A nice retelling that adds a great deal by way of color and perspective-even if not much depth-to afamous and greatly beloved tale. Agent: Esther Sung/Sanford J. Greenburger Associates
Number of Reviews: 12
Average Rating:
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Write a Review
NOT THAT GOOD
JUST A READER, somebody who loves reading, 12/26/2007
I really thought this was going to be a good read. How wrong I was! Esther is just a caricature. The characters are one-dimensional and the whole book felt repetitive.
Recommended !!
A reviewer, Enjoys biblical fiction, 03/12/2006
You will travel back in time and feel as if you are living the life of Queen Esther. A heartfelt and engaging human story. You will not be disappointed.
Also recommended: The Red Tent, Zipporah, Wife of Moses.
A lover of Books!
Liz, a college student, 11/29/2005
This is an excellent book! I found it while shopping, got it home and could not put it down! I loved how the retelling of Ester came alive! I'm Jewish and I always love reading the Megillah at Purim time and booing Hamen! This book is great and I highly recommend it!
Also recommended: The Red Tent, Mists of Avalon, The Burning Times, The Borgia Bride, Empress Orchid, Memoirs of a Geshia,Princess Sultana, Wrinkle in Time
Learning History
Kim, learning to love historical fiction, 07/15/2005
I read this book in one day because I enjoyed it so much!! I was eager to learn what was going to happen next for Queen Esther. Before the book, I was unfamiliar with the bible story from The Book of Esther. I will remember the story from the bible because the author added enough to the story to make it memorable and interesting!!
Also recommended: Sarah - Marek Halter, Birth of Venus - Sarah Dunant, Thorn in My Heart - Liz Higgs
I was glued to my seat!
A reviewer, a historian., 06/07/2005
I couldn't put this book down, and that hardly ever happens. I would reccomend this book to people who like historical novels and just plain good stories. It is intense and grabs you till the end!
Also recommended: The Wind River Series by Margaret Coel, excellent historical mystery novels.
Showing 1-5 NextSome had known men though they were not married. Some were young but did not display the beauty of youth. Some bore a blemish that would dampen the king’s desire. Some spoke in sour tones. And some were so quarrelsome that even the harem wine would not make them agreeable. Girls such as these were not admitted into the harem, but sent to the army barracks to serve the rough pleasure of the king’s soldiers. There they soon grew old and broken.
While I recovered from the effects of the harem wine, the others
had moved on to the hairdressers. Puah washed my hair herself,
checking my scalp for nits. She spent an hour combing my tresses
with slow and cautious strokes, spreading them in a fan across my
back until every strand lay in its place, smooth and shining down to
my waist. The old servant had no cosmetics at her disposal, no kohl
to rim my eyes or perfume to sweeten my scent. But she massaged
my feet with almond oil and rubbed pomegranate juice over my
cheeks and lips.
A young eunuch appeared in the doorway of the little room and nodded to Puah, who helped me rise. I was yet unsteady on my feet, and clung to her arm as she guided me through the maze of corridors to a large apartment at the far end of the harem.
I entered a receiving room, my eyes tearing at the bright light that shone from the numerous bronze ceiling lamps. I lowered my gaze to the floor, covered with carpets of scarlet and blue wool woven into an intricate pattern of rosettes within squares. The fabric on the wall hangings shimmered like stars reflecting on the river at night, but the images they depicted—naked women with heavy breasts and full thighs—made me flush with embarrassment.
Puah urged me forward, guiding my steps toward an enormous man who sat on an ornate armchair of ebony inlaid with lapis lazuli and silver. Male attendants stood on either side of him, some holding jeweled daggers. Two boys hovered over him from a perch on a box behind the throne, one with a large fan of woven reeds and the other with a leather fly whisk.
He was dressed in royal robes woven from violet silk and silver threads. Every finger on his hands sparkled with a ring of gold or silver. His posture, even sitting, indicated someone who held himself to be of great importance. The expression of his face—a mixture of scorn, disgust, and revulsion—made his great bulk menacing.
I stood before this man, not knowing who he was or why I had been summoned to him. My reason still muddled by the wine, I formed an idea in myself that he must be King Xerxes. And so I fell to my knees and bowed my head.
“Come forward,” the enormous man ordered. But the pitch of his voice, higher than my own, revealed that he did not have a man’s full vigor. I gazed up at his face: his round, smooth cheek betrayed him as a eunuch despite the tuft of false beard attached to one of his chins.
This creature—neither man nor woman—could not be King Xerxes. Yet I understood from his manner and position that he wielded great power in the harem.
Puah helped me to my feet. We walked to the edge of the carpet, stopping just short of the platform. I saw by the eunuch’s pursed lips and fearsome stare that I did not please him. I glanced to Puah at my side, hoping for some hint how I might win the eunuch’s favor. But her eyes remained fixed on her feet.
“So our wine was not to your liking!” The eunuch’s shrill voice startled me.
“I could not support its strength, my lord,” I whispered.
“You are from Susa?” So great was the pressure of his enormous weight upon his throat that his words came out as great gasps of sound.
“Yes, my lord.” I held back tears for my cousin’s household and all that I had lost that day.
“What are your parents?”
“I am an orphan, my lord.”
“A pretty orphan,” he sighed, appraising me with a stare that made me feel like a goat for sale in the marketplace. He sighed again and leaned toward one of the eunuchs by his side. “Such fair skin and shapely form would tantalize the king’s desire. Bright eyes the color of ripened wheat, and the shape of luscious almonds. And look at the abundant hair. She would have served him well.”
The regret in his voice held my heart like the hangman’s noose. I did not want to be an object of the king’s pleasure, but I feared a worse fate if I did not cooperate. “I shall be your obedient servant,” I heard myself promise.
The eunuch shifted his great bulk back toward me, his eyebrows lifting in surprise. His sharp eyes rose from the flesh of his face like a crescent moon peeking over a mountain.
“What did you say?” he asked.
“I shall be your obedient servant,” I repeated, afraid that I had displeased him.
“What are you called?” he demanded.
“Esther, my lord,” I replied. The name scratched my throat and tore at my tongue as it escaped, like a difficult birth. I no longer heard the word as Mordechai had said it, with love and concern for my safety. I did not hear it as I had introduced myself to the others, with a show of courage. It was the name of someone I did not know.
The eunuch’s thick lips went slack and his mouth fell open as if gasping for air. His false beard quivered. He tightened his grip on the arms of his throne.
He stared at me for some time. I forced myself to return his gaze as if beholding an object of delight.
“Let us inspect her,” the eunuch commanded, breaking his silence after a minute or two. One of his attendants signaled for Puah to remove my robe. The gauzy fabric fell away from my flesh.
I stood alone in the shame of my nakedness. I felt Hegai’s eyes upon me but I could not meet his gaze. After some moments of silence, he raised a finger to a young eunuch who stood beside him. Heaving his great bulk out of the chair, he leaned on the youth like a walking stick and approached me. Each step required great effort. He came so close to me that I could feel the heat of his labored breath on my skin. He circled me, examining every inch of my bare flesh. I held myself very still. I imagined that I was a statue of cool white marble.
After Hegai looked at my skin, he examined behind my ears and in my mouth. He pressed his nose into the hollow between my arm and shoulder. His massive hands cupped my breasts, as if to feel their weight. Then he signaled that I should be laid on my back. With the help of an attendant, he lowered himself to his knees.
Puah draped my robe across my shoulders and chest while a eunuch elevated my hips with a cushion. My legs were spread apart. I was a statue; I felt neither fear nor pain. I closed my eyes and saw my mother.
We were walking on the marble pavement below the hanging gardens
of the great ziggurat. Everything was in bloom. She closed her arms
around me, holding me close to the child she was soon due to deliver. She
wept, thanking the One God for my life and my health. The midmorning
sun warmed us, and we sat down to share a piece of honey cake. We
watched the boats on the River Euphrates float past like clouds. I turned
back to my mother and saw a spasm of pain pass over her sweet face. And
I knew that her time had come.
“No man has known her,” the eunuch Hegai declared, rising to
his feet. Puah helped me with my robe, and I sat up. The keeper of
the women washed his hands in a basin.
“An apartment shall be furnished for her by the evening,” he pronounced. “Attendants shall be provided her as is her due. Whatever her request and her desire, it shall be granted to her.”
I bowed to the keeper of the women, trying to find the words to thank him. But my tongue was still thick with the wine and my body shivered in shame for all that his hands had done to me. And so I said nothing as he pronounced me suitable for the king’s pleasure and instructed Puah to attend me until my apartment in the harem was ready.
We returned to the room where Puah had cared for me. She
helped me settle on to some large cotton floor cushions and brought
me more goat’s milk.
“Thank you for your kindness,” I said as I took the familiar bowl. I tried to tell myself that I had only imagined the interlude in the eunuch’s apartment, but I still felt his hands probing me. I longed to bathe, to rub raw my tainted flesh, to be pure again.
Puah peered down at me, her large eyes blinking as if she were unsure of what she saw.
“Please sit with me,” I begged.
She lowered herself onto a cushion by my side and raised her hand to smooth my hair. I welcomed her comforting touch.
“You have been spared great suffering,” she observed, tucking some hair behind my ear.
“I have not been spared,” I retorted, the words bringing a bitter taste into my mouth.
“You would have gone to the soldiers,” Puah revealed, an edge of reproach in her voice. “Women who cannot tolerate the wine always go to the soldiers.”
I put the milk aside. My hands shook with fear for what I had escaped.
“Your beauty found favor in the eunuch’s eyes,” Puah continued, “but it was something else too.” Her brow furrowed with puzzlement. “Something you said.”
“Perhaps he will change his mind,” I worried.
“He has bestowed upon you an apartment while you are yet a virgin,” Puah replied. “Never has such an honor been given. If you are obedient to him and work hard to please the king, he will not change his mind.”
I kissed Puah’s hand with gratitude. “I cannot remember all that happened after I drank the wine, but I am glad fate brought you to take care of me.”
“It was my God, the God of the Jews, who called me to you,” she insisted. “When you became ill, Shaashgaz sent a messenger in search of a maid. I, the lowest of the chamber servants, put myself forward for the task. No one expected you to stay in the harem, and so I was granted permission.”
I kissed her hand again. “You cared for me as if I were your own child.”
Puah laughed with pleasure. “When I saw you in your illness, I knew you were the child I never had,” she explained. “I thanked the One God for giving me even a few hours to care for you. I prayed for His mercy and begged Him with all my heart to keep you from the soldiers.”
“He heard your prayers,” I whispered, my eyes filling with tears.
“He heard me,” she agreed, drawing me close. “And now we are bound together for all time.”
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