Synopses & Reviews
Out of the pages of history comes the story of passion between a warrior-king and a lowly handmaiden . . .
From the pages of David and Bathsheba:
Ahithophel thought of his granddaughter, Bathsheba. She was no longer a little child but a beautiful, slim, young woman of fourteen, with rich black hair that rippled down to her waist, when not covered. Her eyes were dark and laughing with long lashes that edged them in a most becoming way.
She had been so interested in his guests from Hebron and so impressed when she discovered that her grandfather had known David quite well when both were in Saul’s army. Bathsheba had begged and begged him to describe David to her and had not been satisfied with simple answers.
“Is he tall?” she had asked quite casually.
“Taller than I am,” he had answered without paying much attention.
“What color are his eyes?”
“I don’t know.” He had added, “They are unusual eyes; you might say they were hazel flecked with blue.”
“Is he strong?”
“Very. Muscular but very gentle. It is difficult to describe him.”
“Tell me, Grandfather,” she said finally, “is he handsome?”
Be carried into the turbulent times of a forbidden love.
Synopsis
David and Bathsheba is a spellbinding story of a gifted king and the woman he loved but could not have. Told from Bathsheba's perspective, author Roberta Kells Dorr brings to life the passion that almost cost David his kingdom and tested a people's courage and faith in God.
David and Bathsheba is colored richly with details of Bible-era Israel—from the details of the everyday way of life to details of the Jewish religion. Dorr brilliantly merges reality with folklore as she tells the story of two great characters of the biblical era. The book starts out with Bathsheba as a young girl and David as a strong willed rebellious military leader. It details the way they met and follows them all the way through their difficulties.
About the Author
ROBERTA KELLS DORR is the author of seven books: six novels, one biography. She majored in creative writing at the University of Maryland and received her master¿s in Religious Education from the Southern Baptist Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky. For seventeen years Dorr lived in the Middle East as the wife of a busy missionary surgeon and the mother of five children. On her return to the United States she carried with her the manuscript of the first novel she had written and researched extensively over the years. She claimed that the years in the Middle East, the exposure to their culture, and the experiences she had while there profoundly influenced what she wrote.