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Azazeel
Azazeel | Youssef Ziedan
6 posts | 6 read | 23 to read
In this haunting and controversial novel, Youssef Ziedan confronts issues as vital today as they were nearly two millennia ago. Set in the 5th century AD, Azazeel is the exquisitely crafted tale of a Coptic monk's journey from Upper Egypt to Alexandria and then Syria during a time of massive upheaval in the early Church. Winner of the Arab Booker Prize, Azazeel highlights how the history of our civilization has been warped by greed and avarice since its very beginnings and how one man's beliefs are challenged not only by the malice of the devil, but by the corruption with the early Church. In sparse and often sparkling prose that reflects the arid beauty of the Syrian landscape, Azazeel is a novel that forces us to re-think many of our long-held beliefs and invites us to rediscover a lost history.
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Gezemice
Azazeel | Youssef Ziedan
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It looks deceptive that I read a lot in July: all of The Walking Dead were read on the first two days (I loved all of it), and total 11 of the books were graphic novels. Also, I only read about 30 pages of the Daily Show to finish it. I am actually in a bit of a reading slump. I did have some excellent reads, though. I loved Azazeel, A Dirty Job, The Souls of Black Folk, Eats Shoots And Leaves. Hard to pick favorites!

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Gezemice
Azazeel | Youssef Ziedan
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Azazeel (=devil) is the kind of rare historical fiction that I love: a story set during a time of upheaval, a long gone era and place; also a human story of faith and doubt, of the nature of good and evil, of love and devotion; with the message that fanatism of any kind is evil.

Beautifully written, lyrical, with two passionate romances, and vivid description of a 5th century Egypt between paganism, Hellenism and Christianity. Loved it. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

EchoLogical This sounds like it's right up my alley! #Stacked 7y
Gezemice @EchoLogical Cool! Do you like historical fiction, too? 7y
EchoLogical @Gezemice Not in particular but the religious/mythological aspect sounds awesome. 7y
62 likes6 stack adds3 comments
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Gezemice
Azazeel | Youssef Ziedan
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A large portion of this book talks of Nestorius, bishop of Constantinople around 430, and his "heresy", so I looked it up. After reading Wikipedia, the site of the Catholic Church, and Christianity.com (above), I see almost no difference. Both sides believe that Christ is both God and human, with some wording dispute.

Me thinks that dogmatism of this sort is simply a guise for a power grab.

Izai.Amorim It was a power grab! If you are interested in the history of religion check out a non-fiction book Lost Chistianities by Bart Ehrman. He tells the story of the competing churches that were destroyed and later accused of blasphemy. The winner took all... 7y
Gezemice @Izai.Amorim Yes, I am interested, thanks for the suggestion! I have read enough medieval history to know that's what they are used for. Anyone could be found a heretic when it was convenient. 7y
Izai.Amorim @Gezemice There is also Who Wrote The New Testament by Burton Mack. Both are good bible scholars. They've probably also been called heretics, I guess... 7y
Gezemice @Izai.Amorim Thank you! I will check it out! 7y
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Gezemice
Azazeel | Youssef Ziedan
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"Killing people in the name of religion does not make it religious."

There is much to be learned from history.

#controversial

batsy This sounds interesting and thematically related to some parts of The Satanic Verses, which I just finished. 7y
Gezemice @batsy I should look into that! Rushdie is on my list but never read him. Did you like it? 7y
batsy @Gezemice It was a roller coaster ride 😂 Liked some parts and other parts were a slog. On the whole, didn't quite *like* it but found it worthwhile for the themes it explores. 7y
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Gezemice @batsy Thanks, good to know! The one that is on my list for this year is Midnight's Children. I guess I will have to brace myself... 7y
Debiw781 I love this quote! So very true 7y
Gezemice @Debiw781 Yeah, and surprisingly relevant, 16 centuries later. 7y
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Gezemice
Azazeel | Youssef Ziedan
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My #currentread is quite #controversial. It is a lovely historical novel about a 5th century Coptic monk in Egypt, his travels and his struggles with faith. He is a very devout Christian but sees his faith-brothers commit atrocities in the name of Christ and his belief is shaken. No wonder the Coptic church does not approve of this novel.
#jubilantjuly #currentlyreading
@RealLifeReading

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Hussainq86
Azazeel | Youssef Ziedan
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I've been putting this off for a while. It's time to start now.