The Red Tent

Unabridged
Author: Anita Diamant
Narrator: Carol Bilger
Genres: Religion & Spirituality, Fiction, Christianity
Publisher: Audio Renaissance
Date: January 2002
Length: 12 hours
Ratings:
Formats:
  • CD

Overview

Deeply affecting, The Red Tent combines rich storytelling with a valuable contribution in modern fiction: a new perspective of female life in biblical society. It is a vast and stirring work described as what the Bible might have been had it been written by God’s daughters instead of sons.

Far beyond the traditional women-of-the-Bible sagas in both impact and vigor, The Red Tent is based upon a mention in Genesis of Jacob’s only female offspring—his daughter, Dinah.

Author Anita Diamant, in the voice of Dinah, gives an insider’s look at the details of women’s lives in biblical times and a chronicle of their earthy stories and long-ignored histories. The red tent of the title is the place where women were sequestered during their cycles of birthing, menses, and illness. It is here that Dinah hears the whispered stories of her four mothers—Jacob’s wives Leah, Rachel, Zilpah, and Bilhah—and tells their tales to us in remarkable and thought-provoking oratories. Familiar passages from the Bible take on new life as Dinah fills in what the Bible has left out—the lives of women. Dinah tells us of her initiation into the religious and sexual practices of the tribe; Jacob’s courtship with Rachel and Leah; the ancient world of caravans, farmers, midwives, and slaves; her ill-fated sojourn in the city of Sechem; her years in Canaan; and her half-brother Joseph’s rise in Egypt.

Skillfully interweaving biblical tales with characters of her own invention, the author re-creates the life of Dinah providing an illuminating portrait of a courageous woman and the life she might have lived. A new view of the panorama of life in biblical times emerges from the female perspective, and the red tent itself becomes a symbol of womanly strength, love, and wisdom.

The Red Tent is one of those extremely rare publishing phenomenons—a little promoted, but dynamically successful book (over 250,000 copies sold) that owes its success to enthusiastic word-of-mouth endorsements. Now, for the first time, this sweeping saga, which has struck a chord with so many modern-day women, comes to life as a much-anticipated audiobook.

Reviews (15)

Fabulous

Written by Anonymous on August 19th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 5/5

This was one of the best stories of the female life I have read. There was no soft porn involved in this book as another reader eluded to. This book is perfect just the way it is. I would recommended it to any women interested in finding out how hard life in Egypt was and what women had to endure to make it there.

The Red Tent

Written by Anonymous on May 31st, 2008

  • Book Rating: 1/5

I had to stop listening to this book when I came to the part mentioning bestiality for the second time. It can be said that men took pleasure in unnatural ways without word pictures. Soft porn. To protect what goes into my mind, I had to put it down and will warn all others who want to read this.

Red Tent

Written by Anonymous on May 27th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 2/5

I really hated this book. I've tried to think how I would feel about it if it weren't a perversion of the characters from a beloved story in Holy Scripture. I think I would still hate it. I even disliked the narrator. I couldn't stomach listening to her overly emotional style. The story is monotonous and depressing and the male characters are almost universally detestable. Plus the unpleasant details that we have to suffer through-- such as a primitive circumcision-- just made me wish I had never started this book. It might have been easier to read it so I could skim over the less palatable sections. It reads like a romance novel set in biblical times. I just can't recommend it.

the red tent

Written by Regina Cestaro on January 31st, 2008

  • Book Rating: 5/5

This was one of the most enjoyable books I've read in a long time. The characters came to life. It is very informative historically which ads a great deal of realism to the tale. A very interesting overview of life for women in bibical times.

I would read/listen to this one again

Written by Anonymous on October 31st, 2007

  • Book Rating: 5/5

Excellent book. Wonderful insight to the relationship of women and the many roles in their lives. Put it on your list of must read/listen.

The Red Tent

Written by T.Ryan on October 20th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 5/5

I enjoyed this book very much,I was sad when it was over. It really does transport you to another time and place. I would recommend this book to any woman who is interested in how women, thousands of years ago, supported and lived their womanhood. The reader does a great job too.

Fantastic Read

Written by Anonymous from Hannon, ON on September 28th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 5/5

This is a fantastic story - though I would caution men from reading it. It seems much more appropriate for women. The characters are rich and the story evolves slowly and thoughtfully. I enjoyed this audio book very much.

THE RED TENT

Written by Sheryl Adamson on September 27th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 5/5

VERY GOOD STORY. I COULDNT STOP LISTENING. HIGHLY RECOMMEND.

Red Tent - Phenomenal!

Written by Mandy McCubbin on March 23rd, 2007

  • Book Rating: 5/5

The Red Tent was an insight into stories told outside of the Bible. It begins with a simple Biblical snippet, and expands. It was a learning experience, and gave character and context to the people mentioned in the Bible. It emersed me in that history and made it so I could imagine living at that time, with those people.

The Red Tent

Written by Paula Gutierrez on January 9th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 5/5

This book is an incredible "history" of Dinah, daughter of Jacob. While there are many characters to keep track of, it lends to the complexity of this woman's life. The matter of fact style of Diamant enhances the flow of the novel. I would highly recommend this selection.

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."""