Havah: A Novel
By Tosca Lee
4.5/5
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About this ebook
Created, not born. Her name is Eve. Myth and legend shroud her in mystery. Now hear her story.
She knew this earth when it was perfect—as she was perfect, a creature without flaw. Created by God in a manner like no other, Eve lived in utter peace as the world’s first woman, until she made a choice, one mistake for which all of humanity would suffer. But what did it feel like to be the first person to sin and experience exile; to see innocence crumble so vividly; and to witness a new strange, darker world emerge in its place?
From paradise to exile, from immortality to the death of Adam, experience the epic dawn of mankind through the eyes and heart of Eve—the woman first known as Havah.
Tosca Lee
Tosca Lee is the award-winning New York Times bestselling author of The Progeny, Firstborn, Iscariot, The Legend of Sheba, Demon: A Memoir, Havah: The Story of Eve, and the Books of Mortals series with New York Times bestseller Ted Dekker. She received her BA in English and International Relations from Smith College. A lifelong adventure traveler, Tosca makes her home in the Midwest with her husband and children.
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Reviews for Havah
55 ratings12 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Wow, wow, wow! Completely blown way! The writing was so good, the layered story of Adam and Eve told like never before. Do yourself a favor and read this book.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5The premise for this book was clever and I was really looking forward to reading it, but unfortunately, what could have been a fabulous story failed to deliver. I found the writing style and Havah's voice irritating and the over use of adjectives annoying, which detracted from the narrative. Very disappointing!
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5It's not the first time I've read a novel about the Bible's first woman. But it's the first time a novel about her intrigued and engrossed me this much.While reading Havah: The Story of Eve by author Tosca Lee, I was glad to see that Ish and Isha aren't the more predictable—perhaps, stereotypical—"Adam and Eve" that I've seen depicted before. The author doesn't make this man and woman so much like modern (or Western) thinkers and speakers as to lose the curiousness and antiquity of the story. Havah's journey is poetically developed here with such keen observation and imagination that the telling is truly impeccable, bringing an age-old account to life without making it too easily...contemporary.I must say, though, as engrossed as I was in this novel, much of it was so depressing to me that I almost gave up on it a few times. Of course, being banished from your home and losing depth of communion with your environment, your race, and your God is no "happy" predicament, and I'm not a stranger to books that are simultaneously excellent and hard to swallow. But it seemed so long before the hope that Havah's Adam spoke of early on found much space to convincingly breathe again. After Eden, Havah's petulance and Adam's aloofness became a bit much for me, and as I didn't exactly warm to any of the other characters during the often bleak events, I didn't enjoy the read as much as I would've liked.Still, I can't dismiss the value or, again, the impeccability of the read, and I'd certainly recommend it to readers with questioning minds and an appreciation for lyrical literature. This is the first I've read by this author, and I've every intention of reading more.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Some stories are just accepted and never explored. Some stories are pondered and passed by. Then there is Tosca Lee’s Havah: The Story of Eve.My whole life I have heard the story of the Garden of Eden. I have heard the story of the Fall of Man and the first murder. I’ve read debates on Cain’s life and even participated in a few. But in all honesty, I have never really thought much of Eve.Yes, I’ve studied and discussed her eating of the fruit. But it never went beyond that. I never thought of how she felt coming to life and being the only woman. I never thought of how it must have felt to lose her innocence and find herself expelled from Paradise. I never thought much about her.Thank goodness Tosca Lee did.In Havah, Lee explores Eve like she has never been explored before. The reader is in Eve’s mind as she communes with God, realizes her sin, feels anger against her husband for the first time, feels the first pains of birth, sees death for the first time, watches generations grow up around her, and sees her own seed perish. This is a very moving story that will have the reader wanting to know more. You will have a whole new perspective of Eve and what she went through.Lee does an excellent job of not painting Eve as a saint or as a complete sinner. Eve is shown more as what she probably was – a human who once knew Paradise and who was to live out her long days outside its walls. She is shown as a loving mother who struggles with being a mother as there is no example for her to go by. She is shown as a wife who now has strife in what once was a perfect marriage. She is shown as someone who longs for her communion with her Maker while knowing her life prevents it from being what it once was. This is truly a great book that I will find myself reading over again.Note: This book was provided to me by the publisher without expectation of a positive review.
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- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Originally posted on Tales to Tide You OverHavah is a beautifully written book full of important questions about God, life, and what it means to be human in all our strengths and weaknesses. It tells the story of paradise lost, both how it came to happen and how the characters of Adam and Eve (or Havah) survived after being ejected from the garden in a rush of disastrous weather that destroys their first home.Havah narrates her tale as a persistent voice with only dialogue on occasion. It’s an old style (though coincidentally I just read two published short stories in that style), but works exceeding well in this context where the story is not a matter of events but a matter of how she experiences those events through her own filter. It’s closer even than most first person narratives in that everything we experience is through her.I was raised Catholic so many of the pieces in this story were familiar. Rather than tainting my read, it gave the story a meta text. The questions explored are many that I’ve pondered, and the book even goes so far as to look at the position of women in society and how that came about. Same with eating meat. Havah does not ignore the day to day changes that the events require, though some are glossed over simply because they occur outside of Havah’s perception. She does, however, address the consequences or aftermath, whether she can change the results or only mourn them.This is not a simple novel. It is not a candy read where every piece is given to you on the page. Havah is an in-depth exploration of what it means to be human and to have free will along with the mix of emotions that come from birth.Tosca Lee did her best to stay true to the Christian and Jewish traditions, consulting with both rabbis and priests/ministers, but she brings her own interpretation into play where the text has gaps or there are multiple interpretations of a single event. That said, she does a good job of not demanding her audience comes to the novel with foreknowledge. Whether you know the story of Adam and Eve or not, Havah offers a fascinating look at humanity, faith, and change.I read Havah as a Net Galley title. As always, the opinions are my own.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Tosca Lee has got to be one of the most talented authors in Christian fiction today. It has been such a long time since I read a novel with as much depth as this one had. Normally, I fly through books as so many of them have similar storylines and plot devices, but I found myself slowly and methodically reading this book, absorbing each and every page.This book changed my perceptions of those early days from Genesis that I am familiar with. Tosca's ability to convey the joy of Adam and Eve's time in the garden was contrasted extremely well to their sudden flight after eating the fruit, along with their subsequent wonder of how they would survive. And while it's not the norm for Christian fiction, I appreciated Tosca going the extra mile in describing the love shared between Adam and Eve as husband and wife. It seems that lately this has been frowned upon by some Christian readers, but I found it to be completely natural and added that extra bit of realness to the story.Not only is Havah a great addition to Christian fiction, it is a wonderful addition to the genre of Biblical fiction that is growing by leaps and bounds. I have found that these novels help me in my understanding of Biblical truths, and I always find myself going to the original source and comparing both works side by side. It is my belief that Tosca has found her niche with the Biblical fiction genre, and while I'm sure her newest novel with Ted Dekker is great, I'm eager for her next solo novel in the works called Iscariot.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I loved this book in so many ways I don't even know where to begin! The language is beautiful and flows like music across the page. Interspersed throughout the lyrical sentences are poetic phrases and descriptions that read as if they come from Havah's imagination, but also remind me of the words of the Biblical books Psalms and Song of Solomon. Havah's life is fascinating to watch unfold, from her dreams of the creation of the world, to her first sin and the subsequent aftermath, to each skill that she acquires to survive with the Adam outside of the garden. I shared her joy at the birth of each child, and I found her many discussions and arguments with the Adam to be strangely similar to interactions with my own husband. Here is a woman that every woman ever living could relate to in some way, and it satisfies a craving that I have often felt to simply sit down and talk to the "Mother of All Living." The Bible says precious little about Eve - only three chapters in Genesis make mention of her. The lengths to which Tosca Lee went to create a more complete picture of this captivating woman are detailed at the end of the text, and her list of sources is quite impressive. So much of this story is believable and relevant to even the most modern of women, in such things as her musings of life and death, the ups and downs of her various relationships, her daily tasks to survive, and her struggle to find meaning and purpose for her life. All of the fine details of the development of civilization were also quite entertaining, as I read the beginnings of farming, food preparation, pottery, trade, art, cloth-making, herding, etc. So many things I will think about for years to come, such as how the smallest things could develop over time to have such great impact, like a drawing of Havah's becoming the symbol of a religious sect or the chants of one of her many daughters turning into the song of a nation. This book was a study in human behavior in so many ways as well, such as how their vegetarian lifestyle changed to include first fish and then other meats by repeated famine or how greater numbers of people in close quarters resulted in strife and conflict. I could go on and on about all that I loved about this book, but instead I will simply say that this book is definitely one of the best books I have ever read, and I highly recommend it, no matter what religion the reader prescribes to.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Havah is the story of Adam and Eve. However, this is no Sunday School version! Author Tosca Lee has very skillfully taken the familiar Biblical tale and woven it into a rich tapestry full of unedited human drama, despair, pain, and triumph. The story is told from Eve’s point of view, giving us a whole different perspective – right from the moment she wakes in the garden, to the subtle deception of the serpent, and on through almost 900 years of her struggles as matriarch of all humanity. Lee’s writing is beautifully descriptive; the garden scenes were vibrant, imaginative, and alive with wonder. The vivid imagery continues throughout and the rawness and immediacy of the characters’ emotions is palpable. Lee’s Imaginative take on events as they unfolded was ambitious and overall, this was a very satisfying read. At times, however, I found Havah (Eve) frustratingly petulant and argumentative to the point of being petty. We see this side of her character so often as to almost make us unsympathetic toward her. She is sometimes even kniving, and there was almost a modern day sense of entitlement at times which I wondered at. I suppose when one takes into consideration that her struggles lasted for almost a millennium, one could cut her a little slack… In the end, Lee does a good job of showing us the first couple’s humanity, it all its ruggedness and imperfection. As with any good novel, Havah stays with you long after putting it down. It raises many questions about what life was like in those early years, and Lee does a good job of sequencing the chain of events that could explain man’s ancient development. Of course, as a work of fiction, it is not meant to be treated as Biblical or historical truth. It is one person’s vision of what it ‘might’ have been like. In any case, Havah is worth reading and I highly recommend it. No wonder Tosca Lee is making her mark in the literary world.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5An enjoyable, imaginative "biography" of Eve, the first woman.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The story of Adam & Eve from Eve's birth thru death. Told by Eve in biographical fiction.I really wanted to enjoy this book but I just found it boring. There were a few times I was captured and was like okay it's going to get going but then in a few pages it started falling flat for me again. *shrugs* dunno the idea was awesome...the delivery was just flat for me.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5After reading the first chapter of this book I was drawn in by the way the book was written. I knew instantly that this version of Eve’s life was not going to be presented in the flowery way most Christian books are written. For a lack of a better term, this story of Eve was, well, dark.Tosca Lee has taken a story that generations have heard time and again and researched and reflected deeply on the topic. Do not be fooled by the beautifully written prose in this book. The preciseness and intensity of man’s first sin and the repercussions of that sin will undoubtedly knock the wind out of you. Consider this: It is meant to have exactly that effect!Never again will you look upon the story in Genesis with innocent eyes, from God’s command to Eve to “Wake!” to the beautifully cunning serpent to the grief that followed Adam and Eve for generations—this book is a must-read.You know the story, I encourage you to buy it and have your eyes opened.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Synopsis: Eden, beginning of time. Adam and Eve (Ish and Isha) are created and live in the garden of Eden. You know the drill. The story covers the 600 years of their lives after The Fall.Readability: Hard to get into at first because the scenes in Eden are just a little...smarmy. But, how else can perfect oneness with God be described? I think the smarm was unavoidable. Very easy to read otherwise, though I found myself imagining what a burden it must have been for Lee to write this story. It's not a happy one.Predictability: Like I said, the story line really doesn't hold any surprises, but Lee approached the story from a vantage that I have never imagined. It gave new life to an old story that I know by heart. And it made both Adam and Eve very real and human to me.Couldn't Put it Down Factor: It took me a long time to read this one. Mostly because it was SO sad. The fall of man is no light reading. Ask my friends and family, though, I haven't been able to stop talking about this one.Recommend it?: Absolutely. Absolutely. Even if you don't believe in Adam or Eve or Eden. Or God. Five out of five on this one. I KNOW, right?