Knowledge (XXG)

Quarantine (Crace novel)

Source 📝

216:
At night, a fifth traveller, some distance behind the first four, visits Musa in his tent. The following morning, Musa awakes to find that his fever has broken and his strength is restored. The fifth traveller, it transpires, is the young Jesus, who takes up occupancy of a hard-to-reach cave set in a
240:
Finally, Musa is travelling across country in a wagon and believes he sees Jesus off in the distance. For a moment, he considers finding the figure to forge an alliance with him, but resolves instead to continue his business and to travel the world telling the tale of the stranger who saved his life
232:
The next day, with the tent and Miri's loom having been destroyed by the storm, Musa resolves to leave for Jericho (putting his crime behind him). As he picks his way through the devastation of the camp, he sees a figure which he presumes to be Jesus walking away from the scrubland. Miri finds
29: 236:
Aphas and Shim set off, with Miri and Marta following behind. En route, the women find the two men's packs abandoned at the side of the path. Seeing Musa approaching behind them, and sensing their opportunity to escape, they flee – making for Marta's home town.
209:
begins, the trader, Musa, is suffering from a fever in his tent in the open scrubland on the way to Jericho. There, he and his wife Miri are abandoned by their caravan, who believe him to be on the verge of death.
226:
A series of power struggles ensues, in which Musa asserts his dominance over Aphas, Shim, his wife and eventually by raping Marta during a stormy night, having feigned illness to get her on her own.
213:
They see a group of four travellers, some distance apart, heading in their direction. The travellers are on their way to find shelter for 40 days and 40 nights – the 'Quarantine' of the title.
223:
The group try in turns to coax Jesus from his cave. Convinced he is being tested by Satan, Jesus abides by his quarantine, refusing to take food or water.
406: 396: 233:
Marta, bloodied and bruised in the wilderness. They all make ready to leave, only to find that the restless Badu has escaped with Musa's goats.
416: 401: 351: 288: 124: 411: 220:
Musa turns the situation to his advantage, convincing the travellers that the lands are his lands, and he is their landlord.
179:
Musa: a greedy trader, who is healed by the 'Galilean'. His subsequent behavior suggests he might be a manifestation of Satan
229:
Jesus' body is found in the cave, and the group bury him in the water-hole, which Miri had originally dug as Musa's grave.
263: 421: 381: 391: 201:: aiming to fast for 40 days and nights with divine help; plagued by religious/spiritual hallucinations/visions 257:
as a recent "high" in the history of representations of Jesus in fiction, contrasted with the recent "low" of
386: 310:"Jim Crace: 'At the Watford Gap it hit me that the English landscape was absolutely drenched in narrative'" 426: 156: 309: 357: 347: 284: 131: 119: 339: 60: 28: 191:
Aphas: fasting between dawn and dusk in an attempt to remove the cancer from his abdomen
258: 70: 375: 280: 160: 185:
Marta: fasting between dawn and dusk in an attempt to turn her barren womb fertile
361: 152: 103: 99: 42: 343: 138: 172: 198: 132: 194:
Badu: believed to be deaf and mute; good at catching animals
336:
The Historical Jesus and the Literary Imagination 1860–1920
251:
The Historical Jesus and the Literary Imagination 1860–1920
175:
desert, 2000 years ago, it features seven main characters:
130: 118: 110: 94: 86: 76: 66: 56: 48: 38: 8: 21: 338:. Liverpool University Press. p. 288. 27: 20: 334:Stevens, Jennifer (2010). "Conclusion". 300: 7: 14: 308:Wroe, Nicholas (16 August 2013). 155:. It was the winner of the 1997 407:Novelistic portrayals of Jesus 397:Costa Book Award-winning works 159:, and was shortlisted for the 1: 417:Novels set in the 1st century 264:The Gospel According to Judas 402:Novels set in ancient Israel 443: 245:Reception and significance 182:Miri: Musa's pregnant wife 253:, Jennifer Stevens cites 26: 161:Booker Prize for Fiction 188:Shim: a young traveller 344:10.2307/j.ctt5vjbx8.13 412:Novels set in deserts 157:Whitbread Novel Award 422:Novels by Jim Crace 382:1997 British novels 197:The Galilean/Gally/ 33:First edition cover 23: 392:Historical novels 144: 143: 87:Publication place 16:Book by Jim Crace 434: 366: 365: 331: 325: 324: 322: 320: 305: 259:Jeffrey Archer's 134: 78:Publication date 61:Historical novel 31: 24: 442: 441: 437: 436: 435: 433: 432: 431: 372: 371: 370: 369: 354: 333: 332: 328: 318: 316: 307: 306: 302: 297: 273: 247: 169: 163:the same year. 95:Media type 79: 34: 17: 12: 11: 5: 440: 438: 430: 429: 424: 419: 414: 409: 404: 399: 394: 389: 387:English novels 384: 374: 373: 368: 367: 362:j.ctt5vjbx8.13 352: 326: 299: 298: 296: 293: 292: 291: 272: 269: 246: 243: 203: 202: 195: 192: 189: 186: 183: 180: 168: 165: 151:is a novel by 142: 141: 136: 128: 127: 122: 116: 115: 112: 108: 107: 96: 92: 91: 90:United Kingdom 88: 84: 83: 80: 77: 74: 73: 71:Penguin Putnam 68: 64: 63: 58: 54: 53: 50: 46: 45: 40: 36: 35: 32: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 439: 428: 427:Penguin Books 425: 423: 420: 418: 415: 413: 410: 408: 405: 403: 400: 398: 395: 393: 390: 388: 385: 383: 380: 379: 377: 363: 359: 355: 353:9781846314704 349: 345: 341: 337: 330: 327: 315: 311: 304: 301: 294: 290: 289:0-14-023974-X 286: 282: 281:Penguin Books 278: 275: 274: 270: 268: 266: 265: 260: 256: 252: 244: 242: 241:in the tent. 238: 234: 230: 227: 224: 221: 218: 214: 211: 208: 200: 196: 193: 190: 187: 184: 181: 178: 177: 176: 174: 166: 164: 162: 158: 154: 150: 149: 140: 137: 135: 129: 126: 125:0-670-85697-5 123: 121: 117: 113: 109: 105: 101: 97: 93: 89: 85: 81: 75: 72: 69: 65: 62: 59: 55: 51: 47: 44: 41: 37: 30: 25: 19: 335: 329: 317:. Retrieved 314:The Guardian 313: 303: 276: 262: 254: 250: 249:In her book 248: 239: 235: 231: 228: 225: 222: 219: 215: 212: 206: 204: 170: 167:Plot summary 147: 146: 145: 18: 171:Set in the 22:Quarantine 376:Categories 295:References 277:Quarantine 255:Quarantine 217:hillside. 207:Quarantine 148:Quarantine 283:, (1998) 153:Jim Crace 104:Paperback 67:Publisher 43:Jim Crace 271:Editions 261:novella 139:37420821 100:Hardback 49:Language 98:Print ( 52:English 360:  350:  287:  173:Judean 114:242 pp 102:& 39:Author 358:JSTOR 319:6 May 205:When 199:Jesus 111:Pages 57:Genre 348:ISBN 321:2020 285:ISBN 133:OCLC 120:ISBN 82:1997 340:doi 378:: 356:. 346:. 312:. 279:, 267:. 364:. 342:: 323:. 106:)

Index


Jim Crace
Historical novel
Penguin Putnam
Hardback
Paperback
ISBN
0-670-85697-5
OCLC
37420821
Jim Crace
Whitbread Novel Award
Booker Prize for Fiction
Judean
Jesus
Jeffrey Archer's
The Gospel According to Judas
Penguin Books
ISBN
0-14-023974-X
"Jim Crace: 'At the Watford Gap it hit me that the English landscape was absolutely drenched in narrative'"
doi
10.2307/j.ctt5vjbx8.13
ISBN
9781846314704
JSTOR
j.ctt5vjbx8.13
Categories
1997 British novels
English novels

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.