Through the pain of separation and poverty, Ruth was to become part of the fulfillment of prophecy―and find true love on her own doorstep―in this biblical novel.
Ellen Gunderson Traylor, "America's Foremost Biblical Novelist," is a gifted storyteller who brings characters of the Bible to life. Her many bestselling novels have sold about a million copies in English, with numerous foreign translations.
In addition to writing bestselling novels, Traylor has been a magazine/newspaper columnist and correspondent. An award-winning feature writer, Traylor has written screenplays and political speeches, and was a contributing writer and researcher for the Tyndale Family Bible Encyclopedia project.
"A love story both human and divine! A young Moabite is now a widow. Refusing to return to her parents, Ruth follows her mother-in-law to the Holy Land. There she exhibits a loyalty that softens the bitter old woman, and draws the admiration of a fine Hebrew man. From her faithfulness will usher the line of Messiah".Quote from Powells books Comments: Excellent read. I love this author, and want to read all her books.
This was a great book. The author lives right here in the Florence area. I think anyone who has an interest in "the rest of the story" of some Bible stories should investigate Ellen Gunderson Traylor's historically accurate books.
I was surprised that I read this in 2.5 hours! It was so easy to read, with no gap filler - just a really nice, simple story that kept my interest the whole way through. I will be adding this to my "keepers" list.
This is a delightful little semi-biographical account of a young Moabite woman named Ruth who, because of the kindness and devotion she shows to a poor widow living in a foreign land, becomes one of the most loved women throughout all of history. When Naomi, Ruth’s impoverished Jewish mother-in-law, decides to return to her homeland of Israel after dwelling in Moab for several years, Ruth chooses to go with her, speaking one of the most beautiful and poignant vows ever made down through time: “Do not press me to leave you or to turn back from following you! Where you go, I will go; where you lodge, I will lodge; your people shall be my people, and your God my God. Where you die, I will die—there will I be buried. May the Lord do thus and so to me, and more as well, if even death parts me from you!’ Because of this vow and the selfless care she shows towards Naomi in the months to come, Ruth eventually becomes the great-grandmother of King David and thus a kinswoman in the ancestral line of Jesus. She is a gentle and kind young woman - a widow herself - who takes care of Naomi with all the love and devotion of a true daughter. Gleaning in the fields of Boaz, a wealthy landowner and close relative of her dead husband, she manages to scratch up a few pitiful handfuls of barley in order for the two women to survive day after day. One morning she and Boaz meet and he sees not just a destitute young widow, but a loving and kind woman willing to put her own life on hold to ensure Naomi’s survival. And this touching story isn’t just an account of their unfolding love; it is also a reflection of God’s love for mankind through the kindness, redemption and mercy offered by Jesus’ love and eventual sacrifice for all of mankind when he lay down his life on a cross. The research Ms Traylor has put in to give readers a full insight into Jewish and Moabite traditions from early times certainly makes for an interesting read. So if you enjoy biological facts interwoven with an author’s clever imagination after putting in so much in-depth research, I’m sure you’ll enjoy this wonderful love story as much as I did. I give it 8/10.
Ruth is my favorite book in the Bible, and the account of Ruth and Boaz has long held a kind of romance for me, so I have been picky about fictionalized versions of it. This is my favorite of any I’ve read or watched so far. I think the author did a good job remaining true to the biblical account and to the spirit of it.
Traylor had to attach real motivations to some of the actions and dialog in the account, and both Ruth and Boaz came across just right, in my opinion. Naomi was decent overall, too, though I might have preferred a little more build-up to her comments about being bitter when she first returns to Bethlehem. Orpah, on the other hand, had no love for her mother-in-law, yet wept when she turned back. Even with those notes, though, I thoroughly enjoyed the book and will most likely read it again more than once in the future. In the end, it’s clear to me that this is a love story not only about the romance between a man and woman but between God and man. I can’t recommend this book enough for those who enjoy biblical fiction, and especially those who appreciate the book of Ruth as much as I do.
I am so glad my mum passed this book on to me - reintroducing me to Ellen Gunderson Traylor as an author. So many insights about the Moabites, and their religion, and Israel and their God, and Ruth’s story.