First the land, then the city. It could hardly have been otherwise with the nomadic Hebrews, a tiny cluster of tribes that possessed as yet only a name.
This book had been haunting me. I was studying in the library last week when, out of the corner of my eye, I caught this beautiful and engaging spine (David Roberts). This isn't atypical: my school library has a lot of interesting reads. And yet, as I sat at home reading from my own collection, listening to rain outside, this is the book I came back to. It stuck out so clearly in my mind I could hardly get away from it. When I returned to study today, I thought I might as well get it. The first line had me hooked but I became less and less interested as the pages drove on.
Thinking it may have been the first chapter (mainly an explanation of The Holy Land through the eyes of the Old Testament/Torah, of which I am familiar), I skimmed and skipped ahead to chapter 2. This pattern continued for quite some time before I finally gave up and skimmed the rest of it, pausing mainly to read sections that caught my eye.
What so many seemed to have liked about this book, I did not. I read a lot of "dry" non-fiction for school and work so when I read non-fiction in my personal time, I like it to have more of a narrative. This was a very "bare-bones" account of The Holy Land. As a result, it just didn't quite fit my style. It's exactly as advertised: a bird's eye view of this complicated land as seen from Abraham and on. It's a great book if you're into bare-boned history, but it was a bit too dry for my personal tastes.
Note: I mainly skimmed this so I will not be adding it to my "read" pile for this year so as to not affect my reading challenge. For my personal information, I read this February 27, 2018.