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The Life of David (Jewish Encounters) | 
enlarge | Author: Robert Pinsky Publisher: Schocken Category: Book
List Price: $12.95 Buy New: $10.36 You Save: $2.59 (20%)
Avg. Customer Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 851831
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 240 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 5.2 x 0.7
ISBN: 0805211535 Dewey Decimal Number: 200 EAN: 9780805211535 ASIN: 0805211535
Publication Date: August 26, 2008 (In 5 Days) Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Not yet published
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Product Description Poet, warrior, and king, David has loomed large in myth and legend through the centuries, and he continues to haunt our collective imagination, his flaws and inconsistencies making him the most approachable of biblical heroes. Robert Pinsky, former poet laureate of the United States, plumbs the depths of David’s life: his triumphs and his failures, his charm and his cruelty, his divine destiny and his human humiliations. Drawing on the biblical chronicle of David’s life as well as on the later commentaries and the Psalms——traditionally considered to be David’s own words——Pinsky teases apart the many strands of David’s story and reweaves them into a glorious narrative.
Under the clarifying and captivating light of Pinsky’s erudition and imagination, and his mastery of image and expression, King David——both the man and the idea of the man——is brought brilliantly to life.
From the Hardcover edition.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
Not for the Lazy of Mind April 14, 2008 A challenge to digest perhaps for the intellectual lazy,but well worth the effort. As some one already summed " About a Poet,For a Poet,By a Poet" In short Mr. Pinsky, Bravo!
A on Content/ C on Presentation March 10, 2008 All you could ever want to know about David and a little more...Fascinating insight and information such as the fact that David may have been/probably was related to Goliath...
It's a shame it couldn't have been presented in a more readable style. That diminishes the book, but doesn't offset the value of reading the book to learn more about David, one of the Bible's most intriguing, most human characters.
Still, the best discripton of David comes from the Psalms, one not written by him: "He ruled with integrity of heart..."
Doesn't say he was a perfect person or that he was anything but human...but he had "integrity of heart..." That says a lot about David's life condition and, we hope, ours, too.
Very Disappointing January 3, 2007 5 out of 9 found this review helpful
This book was very disappointing. It was written in a stream of consciousness style with bizarre attempts to integrate modern analogies and to compare David to modern figures from unrelated fields. I had the feeling that it was written in one weekend without the scholarly research for which I would have hoped.
A reading of the life of David December 8, 2006 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is in a way a surprising work. One would have expected a poet like Pinsky to have somehow concentrated on the work which was the Jewish Tradition attributes to King David, the work which is arguably the greatest body of religious poetry ever written, Tehiilim( Psalms). Instead Pinsky retells the whole story of David chronlogically.He retells the story and often artfully reinterprets it .He does this by making wide-ranging and often telling literary comparisons. In the course of this he rejects a basic apologetic line which sees David only as king of virtue, and ancestor of the Messiah to come. He tries instead to see David whole in all his flawed greatness. In the course of reading this work I learned much about David some of which I should have known about before. I believe that the great share of readers will find much to learn here not only about David, but about the Biblical world of which he is a part. Nonetheless there are essential perhaps most essential elements in the life of David , that I believe are not fully treated here. Above all David's relation to G-d , a relation so intensely and powerfully given in Tehillim is not really studied here.
A poetic riff on a famous life August 4, 2006 9 out of 9 found this review helpful
Reading Robert Pinsky's work, one finds great difficulty placing the book in any particular genre. Biographic analysis of biblical characters seems something of a rage at the moment, some excellent, some not. "The Life of David," however, does not fit well with the genre. Unlike the Biblical scholar Baruch Halperin's brilliant "David's Secret Demons" Pinsky eschews footnotes or deep textual analysis. Instead, taking a poet's view, we see here a sort of emotional/artistic portrait of this most complex of biblical characters. Some may find frustrating the way the author moves over the story often moving down strange tangents only to circle back later.
To call the prose of a former laureate poetic may seem odd, but one must consider how well Pinsky textures his words. Perhaps given David's own poetic nature, only one who shared his great love of language could bring the King of Israel to life. While the trip may on occasion grow strange, those who wish to deepen their understanding of King David will find much here to give food for thought.
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