Reviews

The Red Tent - 20th Anniversary Edition by Anita Diamant

sophie_132's review against another edition

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5.0

Meraviglioso. Non piangevo leggendo un libro da molti, troppi, anni; ma la Diamant è riuscita a farmi piangere. Non me l'aspettavo. La tenda rossa è un libro unico, credo uno dei migliori che io abbia mai letto.
Parla del corpo delle donne, ma non del fisico come sia abituati a parlare noi dell'era dei social, ma di come è fatto biologicamente il corpo femminile e cosa può fare; parla di mestruazioni, di gravidanza, di infertilità, di aborti spontanei e di rapporti di sorellanza tra donne. Ci spinge a comparare come le donne nel libro vivono questi eventi nella propria vita e come li viviamo noi nella vita contemporanea. Le donne ogni mese si ritirano nella tenda rossa per celebrare le mestruazioni; vivono questo evento ciclico come un momento per riposare e prendersi cura di se stessi, il tempo di arresta. Questa forzata sospensione imposta dal corpo è un modo per riallinearsi con se stesse e con i propri bisogni. Noi donne del ventunesimo secolo non abbiamo questa fortuna, non possiamo stare male: dobbiamo fingere che stiamo bene e prendere medicine per cercare di sopprimere i dolori lancinanti ogni mese per poter continuare ad adempiere i propri doveri. Cerchiamo di domarli, di soprassedere al tempo naturale del nostro corpo, ma ogni volta esso ci ricorda che non siamo noi a decidere, che se la natura va in una direzione non possiamo opporci, essa è sempre più forte. Abbiamo due strade: o opporci o umilmente accettare la natura e il nostro corpo per vivere meglio questo evento.
Nel libro viene celebrato come una festa, noi lo viviamo come un impedimento, un fastidio e una scocciatura perchè magari scombina i nostri piani e ci rallenta. Forse questo cambio di approccio è dovuto dal fatto che nell'epoca in cui è ambientato il libro i figli erano la priorità per le donne, ora le prospettive sono molto cambiate giustamente e fare figli non è sempre nei piani di vita. Se la società è cambiata e la donna si è emancipata non è avvenuto la stessa cosa al corpo femminile, è sempre lo stesso da migliaia di anni. Dunque, forse dovremmo riabilitare il ruolo delle mestruazioni nella vita delle donne e riallineare il nostro tempo al tempo naturale del nostro corpo; accettare il fatto che il nostro organismo ha bisogno di riposo per rigenerarsi. Anche se non desideriamo figli, il corpo delle donne funziona per poter generare nuova vita e per farlo deve sanguinare perchè "la vita costa sangue". Dobbiamo cambiare prospettiva per sentirci più libere ed essere in pace ed allineate con noi stesse e con il nostro corpo.
Si potrebbe parlare all'infinito di questo romanzo magnifico, ci sono molti temi trattati e molti spunti interessanti su cui riflettere, ma per ora decido di fermarmi qui.

ardamber's review against another edition

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1.0

I have no problem with re-imagining historical events, but I felt like this story when out of its way to knock down some of the great prophets in the bible. I believe in strong female characters, but I also believe that having a strong female character doesn't mean that the male characters have to suffer.

katiescho741's review

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3.0

I've read this book several times. My first read was when I was about 16, and I LOVED it back then! But, now my reading tastes have changed and I find that it's an enjoyable novel, but not as great as I remember.
It's the story of Dinah, and is set in biblical (old testament) times. The stories about the mothers is fascinating; how each represents a different aspect of womanhood. My problem was that the lesser wives Bilhah and Zilpah were a little one-dimensional; Zilpah was religious and Bilhah was small and quiet. That's pretty much all we get about them.
The book focuses on relationships between women, whether it's as friends, sisters, mothers, daughters, teachers, the book is a love story for sisterhood. I enjoyed the simple life they all lead as an extended family, and the separate yet respectful worlds of men and women. The tradition of the red tent being the main focus and the celebration of womanhood via childbirth and periods.
For me, the second half turned into a biblical romance novel...lots of crying with joy during sex, which has always seemed a bit tacky! A few too many coincidental meetings for my liking.
the women in the novel are all strong and capable in their own ways, and they all make their own choices. There's a focus on midwifery as an ancient knowledge and we see various figures in the book being respected for their skills as women.

jlblumenfeld's review against another edition

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emotional hopeful informative reflective medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.75

autumn3's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark emotional sad medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.25

ink_squid's review against another edition

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5.0

WOW.

I wasn't sure I would like "The Red Tent". It kept coming up in my recommendations. I added it to, and removed it from my "to read" list several times. Although I like Historical Fiction, I have not read any set in Biblical Times. I am not religious and worried the story might be overly pious.

I put all that aside and am delighted I did. This book is like a glass of red wine on a beautiful evening, feet on wet grass etc. etc. It's really really good. I think I have a crush on it.

Initially the flowing language was what I was captured by and found I wasn't taking the story in. I quickly got used to the language and loved how it pulled me into the story rather than distract from it.

It is broken into three parts, each quite separate from the others. Main characters from one part were not in the others. Each part stood on it's own as a part of the bigger picture of Dinah's life. They build to show how she comes to be the strong person she is by the end. By this point of course I was like a madwoman giggling and crying over how much I loved this. There was a random stranger beside me in Starbucks and I really wanted to tell her to read this book now!

nicoleme1212's review against another edition

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informative slow-paced

2.5

honeybadger11492's review against another edition

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challenging emotional reflective sad slow-paced

5.0

annekap's review against another edition

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5.0

This beautiful book retells the legacy of Dinah, sister of Joseph (yes the one with the technicolour dreamcoat). The story aches with community, love, and sisterhood. 

Alongside Dinah we experience the red tent, where women gather to menstruate, give birth, nurse, and tell stories. This book had me reflecting on the beautiful community inherent to the shared experience of motherhood and particularly of pregnancy and birth. Oh to be a woman in the red tent eating honey cakes and celebrating femininity with your sisters!! 

moveslikewind's review

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dark emotional inspiring reflective sad medium-paced

5.0