I read The Red Tent today. My initial reaction is that I don't like the way the author cynically assumes the Bible whitewashes its contents,or that the Bible intentionally misleads its reader. The author perpetuates the theory of an unreliable, untruthful Bible - a theory I am strongly opposed to.
In Red Tent, the massacre to appease Dinah's good name was done in bad faith, and Dinah the heroine curses her family as a result. I enjoy a well-written, historical fiction; but I am skeptical when it pretends to "tell the inside story" of the Bible in such a way that it contradicts the truth of the Bible. I can't remember the title of the book, but a few years ago I read a historical nonfiction about the "inside story of Jesus," as told by Mary Magdalene, a Celtic healer who actually possessed the supernatural powers attributed to Jesus. That book repulsed me, as it credited Jesus' resurrection to her supernatural powers. I was so amazed at the blasphemy that I couldn't stop reading... and honestly, I wish I had, because when I read the gospels at times snippets of the book will enter my mind and tarnish the truth with an author's sexualized, occultish version of Jesus. I don't think the Red Tent rises to that level, but perhaps I am more lenient when literary license is taken with the Old Testament versus the foundation of my salvation.
The short review: If you believe the Bible is the inerrant word of God, you will have some problems with The Red Tent. At times, the creative new perspective is fun and refreshing, but for me it crossed the line when it went beyond filling in the holes of the Bible and began contradicting it. I am secure in my faith, but I have concern for the message of the Bible's incredibility continually reinforced by society. Reading this book gave me an almost jealous appreciation of the "red tent," or the three days every month when women got to hang out without men, and reminds me that God created women to take time out for intimacy with each other. But overall I am left with the sinking feeling that I gave this book my most valuable resource - my time - and in the end, I don't feel my life was improved. Maybe it was improved because of the thought it provoked. Or maybe I should have spent more time studying for my final on Tuesday.
All thoughts welcome.