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The Preservationist
 
 

The Preservationist (Paperback)

by David Maine (Author) "Noe glances toward the heavens, something he does a lot these days ..." (more)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Visitations from God are a mixed blessing for Noah and his family in Maine's spirited, imaginative debut. Noah (aka "Noe") may have pissed himself upon hearing God's instructions to build an arc, but he sets to the task without delay. He crosses the desert to buy lumber from giants; his eldest, Sem, fetches Cham, the son with shipbuilding skills; Sem's wife, Bera, and Cham's wife, Ilya, gather the animals; and Japheth, Noe's youngest, helps, too, in between goofing off and "rutting" with wife Mirn. And, of course, there's "the wife," 600-year-old Noe's once-teenage bride, who takes everything "Himself" (that's Noe, not God) dishes out with time-tested practicality. Wildly different in temperament, age and provenance, these characters, each telling part of the story, help create a brilliant kaleidoscopic analysis of the situation: the neighbors who ridicule Noe and clan; the inner doubts and shifting alliances; the varying feelings toward God, whose presence is always felt and sometimes resented. The flood comes as a relief from the wondering ("who is crazier: the crazy man or the people who put their faith in him?"), but hardship soon follows. Though the ending is already written, Maine enlivens every step toward it with small surprises. A story of faith and survival (think Life of Pi thousands of years earlier with a much larger cast of characters), this debut is a winner.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From AudioFile

Noah's story--Noe as he's called here--is reconstructed in this brilliant debut novel by David Maine. Until now, the characters have never seemed so haplessly human nor the tale so plausible. In Noe's time, rape, incest, prostitution, and moral squalor were the rule. Maine draws a powerful portrait of the 600-year-old Patriarch with all his grousing fanaticism in place. The dutiful building of the ark, the rounding up of pairs of animals, the ridicule of neighbors and their piteous deaths in the Deluge, and the day-to-day drudgery of life on a floating zoo are spoken by Noe, his long-suffering wife, his three sons, and their wives. A perfect fit for audio, Maine's witty, always credible monologues, performed by an exceptional cast, will draw listeners into familiar yet stunningly original territory. S.J.H. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine --This text refers to the Audio CD edition.

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Noe glances toward the heavens, something he does a lot these days. Read the first page
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5.0 out of 5 stars Simply a great read, Jul 18 2004
By A Customer
This is a remarkable first novel. Let's be frank -- it's a remarkable novel. Art does not need to do this, but Maine has written a work of art that invites its reader to become better, to understand the world more, for having read it.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A Book for the Non-Believer as well as the Believer, Jul 12 2004
Noe, at six hundred years old, while out searching for a lost lamb, has been chosen; his God, Yahweh, has come to him in a vision and instructed him to build a boat and to prepare for a deluge.

Noe, with his wife, must gather his sons together; the oldest Cham and wife, Ilya, Sem and his wife Bera and the youngest Japheth with Mirn. They must build a very large ark to hold two of every living species that they can collect, store provisions before the rains start and be ready for a very long voyage.

This first published novel by David Maine is different. Different is good. Therefore, this book is good. However, it is much more - it is a readable, if not a familiar bible story, told in a very familiar style for the 21st century. To explain his reference material, the author notes that "Quotations are taken from the 1914 printing of the Douay Bible, translated by the English College at Rheims in 1582 and first published at Douay in 1609. All names are spelled as in that edition."

The reader is right there, inside each character's head, as the trials and tribulations unfold. What are these people feeling? Living at such close quarters, young and old, animals, insects, reptiles and humans, they experience many emotions. The author reveals to the reader what he thinks would be overwhelming the immediate family members in this confinement, especially the feelings toward Noe. During the early part of the voyage, Ilya imparts passionate insight in a modern colloquial reflection:
"To be honest, when the rain started I was shocked. I had supposed my father-in-law to be something of a crackpot, though admittedly a compelling one. I never expected him to be right."

The morbid conditions of imprisonment in the boat during the deluge "...collecting buckets of dung from the holds" the dangers of firing a cookstove so that "Noe shudders: one solid wave would pitch those coals into the tar...", the foul air, "...the relentless swinging of the boat..." are the no-holds-barred style of Maine that makes his telling of this story so vivid.

Sem is delighted that after six months "Just like that the clouds start shredding, sky showing through. I swear I had forgotten what blue looked like, but there it is. I start crying then. We all do." The boat settles into mud and silt. Noe ventures out and on his return commands the family set about releasing the cargo. A marvelous and picturesque representation by the author of what happened next:

"The animals bolted, a snarling, trumpeting host. Elephants squelched knee-deep in marshy soil; big cats slunk away like sinners; buffalo and wildebeest lumbered off. Giraffes ambled, zebras trotted, wolves darted. Rhinos stepped carefully, shortsightedly, like old people."

How could a reader not be enchanted by Maine's words, believer or not?
After a year at their settlement, the human and animal population has thrived and increased; life is good. Noe, while walking in the hills receives another message from Yahweh, his God. Noe is to send his sons and their wives out into the world to explore, settle and populate. The sons and wives have matured and become settled in their ways, but they heed their father's wishes and prepare to leave. Mirn, the wife of Japheth, who was thought to be the immature and brainless one, has obviously grown emotionally and intellectually. She muses and predicts to Japheth:
"Of course people will tell something, it was the end of the world after all. A story like that won't be forgotten. But things will get added and left out and confused, until in a little while people won't even know what's true and what's been made up".

Even those of us who are Christian non-believers will be charmed with this telling and with the style of the author David Maine. A small book in size but even the jacket design and cover by Jonathan Bennett is creative and adds to the originality of the presentation and the contents.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Just read it!, Jun 30 2004
By A Customer
In The Preservationist, David Maine takes one of the Old Testament's most fanciful, seemingly allegorical episodes and brings it kicking and bleating to life. Maine takes the story of Noah's ark and dares to fill in the gaps, rendering the logistics of Noah's (or Noe's) feat surprisingly credible while grounding the narrative in fresh, earthy detail. What ultimately makes this novel more than a precarious literary stunt is Maine's deft characterizations--the women, in particular, inject the tale with sly resourcefulness and dry wit. The Preservationist is darkly funny and often irreverent, but its timely themes (which address family, faith, and the very meaning of life) pack a deceptively powerful punch.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars What a great storyteller!
I was a little hesitant to read this book, even though it was recommended by a friend who's a Christian, and has great taste in books. Read more
Published on Jun 29 2004

5.0 out of 5 stars A great re-telling of a great story.
A quick yet memorable read that is truly original and impossible to put down. It's hard to make anything but symbolism and allegory out of a 600-year-old man who hears voices from... Read more
Published on Jun 28 2004

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