Review
Mary, Called Magdalene
Previously, Margaret George has written powerful novels peopled
with historical figures already quite familiar to us: Henry VIII,
Mary Queen of Scots, and Cleopatra. Read any one of them and you
feel --- not that you are meeting someone new --- but that you are
getting much better aquatinted with someone who has always been in
your life, albeit peripherally.
But with MARY CALLED MAGDALENE, George was challenged to invent
more than she could recreate. Very little has been known about this
woman who walked with Jesus and has been called a prostitute, a
female-divinity figure, and church leader.
Meeting the challenge and rising to it, George has written a
compelling tale of a woman who walks out of her life as Jewish wife
and mother to walk beside Jesus and become one of his
apostles.
It would be easy to write a novel about Mary Magdalene, Jesus,
Judas, and the other Apostles and lose the reader in didactic
abstractions and lengthy religious tracts. But while George's Jesus
preaches to his followers, the author never preaches to her
readers. And while the characters have strong spiritual sides,
George never crosses the line and forgets that she is writing a
novel.
As with each George novel, readers are totally immersed in time and
place, this time transported to the Middle East of Biblical times.
But rather than feeling like we are getting a history lesson, we
are treated to a rich and dramatic novel.
We first meet the child Mary of Magdala in the first hundred years
of the first millennium. The daughter of a successful fish
processor, Mary is raised in a religiously observant family in the
town of Magdala on the Sea of Galilee. When she finds an ivory idol
--- with half closed eyes and sensual lips --- she secrets it away
and keeps it, although it is against all Jewish teachings to
worship graven images.
The idol turns out to be a demon who speaks to Mary and then comes
to possess her. After her marriage and the birth of her daughter,
other demons come to haunt her, until finally Mary is near death
from madness.
Seeking cure after cure she winds up having to abandon her husband
and child to go into exile in the desert --- to either be killed by
the spirits that possess her, or to be rid of them forever.
And it is then that Mary meets Jesus, who commands the evil spirits
to leave her. Through his healing she is initiated as his disciple
and ultimately has to make choices that wrench her heart and test
her spirit.
Weaving together hints from the New Testament, Gnostic gospels, and
other ancient texts, MARY CALLED MAGDALENE brings to life a woman
about whom we have known too little for far too long. George's
Mary, "Apostle to the Apostles" and companion to Jesus, is a
strong, independent woman, and her fictional biography is a
compelling and worthwhile read.
Reviewed by M. J. Rose (www.mjrose.com). M. J. Rose's newest novel is FLESH TONES. on January 22, 2011
Mary, Called Magdalene
- Publication Date: May 27, 2003
- Genres: Fiction, Historical Fiction
- Paperback: 656 pages
- Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics)
- ISBN-10: 0142002798
- ISBN-13: 9780142002797


