The Bones of the World

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Pub Date Feb 21 2023 | Archive Date Mar 15 2023

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Description

Suffering guards its mysteries, but when an upswell of antisemitism forces Rachel into hiding from the Righteous, she begins her journey to its center.

The journey will take her back in history, to Sariah, a young woman whose status during the Inquisition is doubly-marred as a Jew and as a lesbian; and to Jakob, a teenage boy who spends the Holocaust hidden in a farmhouse where he plans his revenge in the only way he can. Back in the present, in the cemetery, the Jewish children murdered by the Righteous wait for their stories to be told.

Written with a trenchant humor, The Bones of the World asks who we become as a result of suffering. Like Jakob, desiring revenge? Like Sariah, seeking the salve of a community that accepts her? Or like Rachel, opening to the ancestral suffering that is her life's clay, and her role in the swell of its story? A deeply spiritual book, The Bones of the World seeks to locate the place of suffering in a holy world and explores why we must tell these stories that are so often hard to hear.

Suffering guards its mysteries, but when an upswell of antisemitism forces Rachel into hiding from the Righteous, she begins her journey to its center.

The journey will take her back in history, to...


Available Editions

EDITION Paperback
ISBN 9781639887422
PRICE $18.99 (USD)
PAGES 360

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Average rating from 4 members


Featured Reviews

I truly enjoyed this tale.. Just the right amount of magical realism, the characters really stick with you, and what they endured. This was a great novel and I hope to read more by Ross

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This blurb from the author adds even more depth to the beauty and emotional connection this reader experienced while reading The Bones of the World - "(It) was written as I pursued answers to the age-old question of why suffering exists in the world. Having lost my son three short days after his 30th birthday to an opioid overdose, I could no longer avert my eyes to suffering--my own and others. As the character Inés says to Rachel, "In this life of inevitable pain, each loss allows us to make a choice--to hide from the pain, adopting mask on top of mask so that we can no longer recognize ourselves, or stand with dignity and open hearts and go where the pain leads." Each of the three tales is set in a different time period, from the Inquisition to the Holocaust to the near future where antisemitism is boiling up yet again. Each section could have been it's own book but together that supercharge the impact. Highly recommended!

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Overall, I loved the concept of this. It provides a broad historical focus of Jewish suffering while narrowing in on the core feelings/thoughts/questions that have been collectively shared by those in suffering. One such question is <i>why</i> do <i>we</i> suffer? The broad focus is explored by following the paths of three Jewish people: one during the Spanish Inquisition Time Period, the second during the Holocaust, and the third in a modern day, alternate reality.

I was very glad that there was a historical focus on the Spanish Inquisition. I personally work in a school which has a large population of Sephardic Jews and I find that many people are not aware of the suffering that Jewish people experience during this time as they were exiled from Spain and its colonies and/or forced to convert to Christianity.

Additionally, I appreciate the magical realism elements, especially as they brought focus to the voices of children. However, I wish the magical connection was explored deeper throughout the text. Rather than connecting the various stories in the novel, it felt like it existed separately from the stories of the past which detracts from its significance. Also, the story itself felt stronger than the writing.

I do want to add some TWs for violence and sexual abuse/assault. The descriptions in this are often raw, sudden, and graphic.

Thank youuuu to NetGalley and BooksGoSocial for a copy of the book in exchange for my honest review!

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