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Book Reviews of The Source

The Source
The Source
Author: James A. Michener
ISBN: 57290
Pages: 1,088
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 1

4 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Fawcett Crest
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Write a Review

19 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

bookaddict avatar reviewed The Source on
Helpful Score: 6
I love this book. I read it first as a teenager, and have re-read it several times since. It is Michener at his best, a huge saga beginning in prehistoric times and encompassing thousands of years, compelling and fascinating and incredibly absorbing. The book is set at an archeological dig site: each artifact unearthed has a section (a story) devoted to the corresponding time period. As you move through the layers of the dig, you move through the history of religion (idolatry to Judaism to Christianity to Islam). The "present-day" portion (set on the dig site, involving the archeological team) explores the modern-day Middle East tensions - which are so much more meaningful and rich after having read the sections about the past.

I haven't read this book for years, and yet I think about it frequently to this day - the stories are really haunting. I read a few Michener books in my youth, and this is definitely the one that "lasts" - it does not seem dated in the way the others do. If you want to be absorbed into a book for a long time (it's a long book)...if you want to meet many characters who will live with you possibly forever...if you want to learn more about the history of the area that birthed three religions and about the religions themselves...if you don't care about religion but just want a book that has ripping good yarn after ripping good yarn, so real that you can SEE the characters, the whole thing laced together with subtle but unifying themss...if you want a book that really quenches that thirst for a great story, that you will finish with a satisfied sigh...read this book, don't delay. Put some time aside - it is very much worth it.
reviewed The Source on + 8 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
This is hands down, absolutely my favorite Michener novel. Truly wonderful!
reviewed The Source on + 8 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Michner's storytelling style of history begins with archaeologists digging at a site in Makor. The early Hebrews life, the impact of Christianity, the Crusades, the Spanish Inquisition to present-day Israel and the Middle East Conflict are covered.
reviewed The Source on + 42 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
This is my all-time favorite Michener book.
I can't even remember how many times I've read it.
reviewed The Source on + 12 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Michener provides a comprehensive history of the Jewish nation and its place in history. A very broad historical fiction. It has a slow start but soon becomes an engrossing novel. it was \"required reading\" for us before visiting Israel and gave a great understanding.
batgirl avatar reviewed The Source on + 284 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I have never been able to complete this book. One reviewer on this list said it started slow. That was not the problem with me. Because of the constant switching from the present-day characters to the VERY distant past, I kept losing track of the story line.
glory-to-glory avatar reviewed The Source on + 31 more book reviews
I could not put this book down!!!
buzzby avatar reviewed The Source on + 6062 more book reviews
Written in 1965, I read it soon after, and if you had asked me, I would have said it was the best book ever written. I re-read parts of it now, and I'll still stick with my opinion, but it does seem kind of dated and 50s-style shallow today, with characters saying such cheery things like "Just like the Jews, denied religious liberty by all, they extend it to everyone." A lot of my attitudes towards that region, archeology and the ancient and medieval world were formed by this book, and I still think you can get more knowledge from it than most history books, but, my gosh, it's still a novel. Michener apparently was 300 years off on the date that the gospels were written (he has them being written in the 300s, it is now universally accepted that they were written 60AD-100AD), I don't know whether that is because of outdated scholarship or what.
reviewed The Source on + 13 more book reviews
Excellent book of historical fiction. Classic James Michener.
nccorthu avatar reviewed The Source on + 569 more book reviews
A fine Michener Book giving the "jewish " history of a place in his usual manner. His usual "docudrama" in book form.
buzzby avatar reviewed The Source on + 6062 more book reviews
This is my all time favorite book, at least of my youth. This one has great maps and what I thought was an admirable adherence to the historical record, for an imaginary city.
reviewed The Source on + 3 more book reviews
Terrific historical novel for a history buff.
reviewed The Source on
An extraordinary book, combining ancient and modern times. As an avid lifelong reader, I rarely re-read a book, except for this book. I read this book when it was first published in paperback. I still have my original copy, have read it once a year since I bought it. I have been looking for a replacement for years and finally found one on PBS.
reviewed The Source on + 149 more book reviews
This is one of Michener's novels that I had the most difficulty getting "into" until I read the book a second time. It is full of detail, so filled with the long historical record of the middle east.
It still retains a place on my shelf, to be read yet again.

I would recommend if you have not read this novel, but have enjoyed Michener's other novels.
reviewed The Source on + 240 more book reviews
Author is James A. Michener. 1088 pages. I could not read it due to size of print. I have always enjoyed other Michener books, but my gave out on page 18. Hope you can enjoy it. Carol
reviewed The Source on + 13 more book reviews
This sweeping epic traces the fictitious history of Makor, a city in Israel, from prehistory to modern times. Starting in the 1960s, an archeological dig turns up artifacts in an ancient mound composed of the remains of successive settlements in Makor. Then, starting with the deepest, oldest artifact and moving forward in time, in successive chapters Michener chronologically describes the inhabitants (who are often descendants of characters in earlier chapters) and events in and around the city over thousands of years. In this way, he tells the fascinating story of the Jews and other local inhabitants, of Judaism and its role in the creation of Christianity and Islam, and of the establishment of the modern state of Israel.
reviewed The Source on
A most interesting book for any Christian or Jew; this book provides an insight into the "Holy Land", its history and issues, in the form of a great novel.
reviewed The Source on + 155 more book reviews
historical fiction, dealing with events surrounding a dig...
reviewed The Source on + 37 more book reviews
"A sweeping chronology filled with excitement--pagan ritual, the clash of armies, ancient and modern: the evolving drama of man's faith." "A monumental and imaginative novel of the old-new nation Israel." " . . .fiction loaded with historical fact."