Good Harbor

Unabridged
Author: Anita Diamant
Narrator: Linda Emond
Genres: Fiction
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Date: December 2008
Length: 7 hours, 30 minutes
Ratings:
Formats:
  • CD
  • WMA

Overview

"Anita Diamant's international best seller The Red Tent brilliantly re-created the ancient world of womanhood. Now Diamant brings her remarkable storytelling skills to Good Harbor - offering insight to the precarious balance of marriage and career, motherhood and friendship in the world of modern women. The seaside town of Gloucester, Massachusetts is a place where the smell of the ocean lingers in the air and the rocky coast glistens in the Atlantic sunshine. When longtime Gloucester resident Kathleen Levine is diagnosed with breast cancer, her life is thrown into turmoil. Frightened and burdened by secrets, she meets Joyce Tabachnik - a freelance writer with literary aspirations - and a once-in-a-lifetime friendship is born. Joyce has just bought a small house in Gloucester, where she hopes to write as well as vacation with her family. Like Kathleen, Joyce is at a fragile place in her life.

A mutual love for books, humor, and the beauty of the natural world brings the two women together. They share their personal histories, and help each other to confront scars left by old emotional wounds."

Reviews (3)

Good Harbor

Written by Pat on August 14th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 2/5

I'm in the middle of Disc 2 and will return this book tomorrow. I found Kathleen's attitude toward her diagnosis of breast cancer annoying. Before she even got the results of her surgery, she had herself buried. The book is boring -- I keep waiting for the story to start and after almost two discs, it hasn't grabbed me. Glad it's a rental and not a purchase.

Good Harbor

Written by Anonymous on June 6th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 5/5

Anita is an excellant writer and you can just picture the characters and places that she writes about. I did enjoy the book---and it shows that there is "grace" before we totally ruin our lives. That even though we do bad things, there is forgiveness and changing is possible--- before all of the consequences are dealt out. And that we don't get all of the consequences that we deserve. Also a great story of mentoring each other, the older and younger and vice versa.

Good Harbor

Written by Anonymous from East Lansing, MI on August 19th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 4/5

Good rainy weekend book. Issues including death of a child and cancer and handled in a realistic fashion.

Author Details

Author Details

Diamant, Anita

"Anita Diamant is a prize-winning journalist whose work has appeared regularly in the Boston Globe Magazine and Parenting magazine. She is the author of five books about contemporary Jewish practice: Choosing a Jewish Life, Bible Baby Names, The New Jewish Baby Book, The New Jewish Wedding, and Living a Jewish Life (with H. Cooper). She lives in West Newton, MA, with her husband and daughter, Emilia, to whom the book is dedicated.

Diamant says it was the relationship between Leah and Rachel that stimulated her thinking about The Red Tent. ""The Biblical story that pits the two sisters against one another never sat right with me. The traditional view of Leah as the ugly and/or spiteful sister, and of Jacob as indifferent to her, seemed odd in light of the fact that the Bible gives them nine children together...As I re-read Genesis over the years, I settled on the story of Dinah, their daughter. The drama and her total silence (Dinah does not utter a single word in the Bible) cried out for explanation, and I decided to imagine one.""

Aiding her work was ""midrash,"" the ancient and still vital literary form, which means ""search"" or ""investigation.""

""Historically, the rabbis used this highly imaginative form of storytelling to make sense of the elliptical nature of the Bible-to explain, for example, why Cain killed Abel...The compressed stories and images in the Bible are rather like photographs. They don't tell us everything we want or need to know. Midrash is the story about what happened before and after the photographic flash.""

She points out that ""The Red Tent is not a translation but a work of fiction. Its perspective and focus-by and about the female characters-distinguishes it from the Biblical account in which women are usually peripheral and often totally silent. By giving Dinah a voice and by providing texture and content to the sketchy Biblical descriptions, my book is a radical departure from the historical text."""