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Gospel Of Corax
 
 

Gospel Of Corax (Paperback)

by Paul Park (Author)
2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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From Amazon.com

The Gospel of Corax is the autobiography of a young man raised by a Roman apothecary after his father, a mercenary soldier, is captured and sold into slavery. The story opens with Corax fleeing across the Mediterranean, his master dead and his master's house in flames. Wanted for murder, Corax combines his escape with a pilgrimage of sorts to his father's birthplace in the Indian Himalayas. As an outlaw, he meets Jeshua of Nazareth, who accompanies Corax on his journey. The two encounter aristocrats, bandits, caravans plying the silk route, and barbarous Huns. They realize they are not only fleeing the Romans but are doing something more profound. Their quest for survival turns into an insatiable quest for knowledge. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From Publishers Weekly

Not many authors have the chutzpah to write an apocryphal gospel, certainly not one told by an engaging gay criminal sidekick of Jesus, but Park has done just that, with great verve and provocativeness, if not much theological good sense. Park's previous novels have been science fiction (Celestis, 1995, etc.); here, he uses his keen imaginative skills to blend historical fact with wild flights of fancy. A runaway Roman slave attempting to dodge his own psyche as well as the men out to capture him, Corax possesses a store of knowledge that runs wide and deep. He is fluent in many languages and is able to perform seemingly any medical procedure, talents that come in handy during his far-ranging and bloody journey. On the run, Corax rescues a still unknown Jesus from a Jewish jail, where he's being held on suspicion of treason. Together, the two trek to the foothills of the Himalayas, where Jesus' embryonic teachings are fully formed by Buddhist and other Eastern masters. This is a dark narrative, full of brutality and misery?so much, in fact, that at times the gruesomeness borders on the cartoonish (as does Corax's medical derring-do). What's more likely to rub some readers raw, though?besides Park's earthy depiction of Jesus?is the novel's claim of Eastern influence on Jesus' teaching (a claim not new with Park, but one with little evidentiary back-up), and its implied favoring of Buddhism over biblical religion. Yet Park is an accomplished storyteller, and through vivid imagery he manages to sweep readers back to rougher times, offering a memorable portrait of one man and a challenging one of the man he calls "rabbi." Author tour.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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2.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1.0 out of 5 stars The Gospel of Corax, Aug 29 2000
By A Customer
2,000 years ago, a Roman-born slave named Corax escapes Rome after either: 1) his master kills himself; or 2) he kills his master (we're never told which one is absolutely true). Corax journeys to Palestine and becomes renowned as a healer and shifty miracle man. He encounters Jesus (known as "Jeshua"), steals his money, escapes from many evil, violent slave-chasers (who are after him for the crime of killing his master), and then journeys with Jeshua towards the area of the Far East, which is now known as the Himilayas. I disliked this book intensely. The writing style is as heavy and gray as boulders, and the author goes to GREAT lengths to describe bodily discharges, to make it sound "honest." About 90% of the story is LENGTHY descriptions of either the land traveled through, or deteriorating broken human bodies, with extensive references to all kinds of ancient "gods," and very little interesting interaction amongst the main characters. Park introduces about 20 vocabulary words of ancient reference, which he never defines, which is frustrating. The author seems to take pride in reversing every single myth about Jesus, just for the sake of doing just that, and gives zero insight into Jesus's character, or growth. I was extremely disappointed and annoyed.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting journey through ancient lands, Aug 29 2000
I almost threw this book away after about 50 pages, being a Christian and all, because it portrays Jesus, at first, as a hulking member of a gang of murderers and John the Baptist as a degenerate. That's a bit much. But I have an interest in the ancient lands where the story was to unfold, acoording to the flyleaf, and I know that some authors take a while to hit their stride. And indeed the writing gets better and better as one proceeds, as the author takes us through obscure lands of the east at the time of Christ, sprinkling his story with obscure characters from historical writings, for example those of Josephus. Dusty ancient beliefs and philososphies are brought to life through energetic characters we meet along the way. The ending seems a bit arbitrary, but at least there is a lot of action.
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