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Loading... Rhadopis of Nubia (1943)by Naguib Mahfouz
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. While a very good story, I found the older, formal style not to my taste. Although, perhaps, appropriate to a novel of ancient Egypt? ( ) Rhadopis Naguib Mahfuz Publicado: 1943 | 175 páginas Novela Histórico Serie: Trilogía egipcia #2 /sMYQ1g8Ev_G4 En el sensual y embriagador Egipto de la Antigüedad, el jovencísimo faraón Mernerá II, recién instalado en el poder junto a su hermana la reina Nitocris es subyugado fatalmente por el misterio del amor. La hábil cortesana Rhadopis, de enigmática belleza, cae también en la pasión por quien es su señor pero se le entrega mansamente cada anochecer. Sin embargo, la poderosa casa sacerdotal, celosa guardiana de sus prerrogativas y de las tradiciones de los templos sagrados, se conjura para apartar del trono al faraón que prefiere anteponer su insaciable sed de poder, su tenaz orgullo y su deseo a los intereses del Estado. Rhadopis es una hermosa y sencilla alegoría protagonizada por la generosidad y la perfidia, la fatalidad y la ambición de poder, la belleza y las fuerzas ciegas que se oponen a la voluntad de los individuos. A través de la historia del faraón Mernerá II y de su insobornable amor por la bella Rhadopis, Naguib Mahfuz ofrece una estremecedora reflexión sobre los sentimientos más íntimos del ser humano, al tiempo que una brillante recreación del ambiente espiritual del Antiguo Egipto. After the Festival of the Nile in Ancient Egypt, the beautiful courtesan Rhadopis bathes in her palace pool on the island of Biga. Her servants shriek as a falcon swoops down, grasping one of her golden slippers in its talons and takes flight. In the royal palace, Pharaoh Merenra II talks with his two trusted advisors regarding the recent unrest with his Prime Minister Khnumotep and the priests, angered that the King wishes to take back property and riches gifted to them by his royal ancestors. As they talk, a falcon flies by, dropping the precious slipper into the lap of the king. Awed by such a sign from the Gods, the King learns of the slipper's owner and her beauty and sets out to return the article to her. Love strikes the hearts of both Rhadopis and the king when they first see each other. The King pledges to make her life a paradise, gilding her palace in gold and other treasures to match her beauty; Rhadopis finds herself experiencing love for the very first time and gives herself unhesitatingly to the King. But all of this does not come without a price. As the king spends wealth and gold upon the palace in Biga, Khnumotep and the priests rally their countrymen, spreading rumors of his squandering the wealth gifted to the priests on the whims of a dancer. The civil unrest wends its way to the streets of the capital, resulting in tragedy. I'm of two minds regarding this novel. While I enjoyed the glimpse into life in Ancient Egypt, the architecture, the politics, the almost salon atmosphere of Rhadopis' palace with her discussions of art politics architecture and other heady topics, the characters seemed almost too much like the cast from a soap opera. The King dismisses or ignores any signs of unrest inside his kingdom because he is blinded by his love of Rhadopis. Rhadopis goes from flirtatious to reverential within a single meeting with the King, only briefly touching on the subject of love which she's never truly experienced. The Queen Nitocris, even after she learns of her King's rendez-vous with the courtesan, remains adamant about staying by his side through thick and thin. Somewhat hard to believe but, in the context of this novel, they still made it an enjoyable read. In fact, the author -- Naguib Mahfouz -- drew me in and kept me enrapt with all the polticial deceptions intrigue and love triangles. Who doesn't like a good soap opera now and then no reviews | add a review
Against the background of the high politics of Sixth Dynasty Egypt, a powerful love grows between Rhadopis, a courtesan of low birth whose ravishing beauty is unmatched in time or place, and youthful, headstrong Pharaoh Merenra, worshiped by his people as a divine presence on earth. Despite the attention of an endless stream of suitors, entertained by Rhadopis's dancing, singing, and stimulating conversation in her white palace on an island in the Nile, her heart remains cold and loveless--until events conspire in the strangest of ways to bring her to the attention of Pharaoh himself. From there the two of them embark on a journey of intense passion that is totally absorbing and ultimately tragic. As their obsession for one another burns wildly, they become caught up in the violent turbulence of the politics of the day--Merenra through his desire to sequester the properties of the priesthood and Rhadopis by her efforts to control the march of destiny and avoid their untimely but inevitable fate. But for Rhadopis, who has played with men's minds and danced on the scattered shards of their broken hearts, and Pharaoh, who has sought to flaunt ancient tradition for his own ends, can the power of love ultimately offer protection? No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)892.736Literature Other literatures Afro-Asiatic literatures Arabic (Egypt, Lebanon, Palestine, Saudi Arabia, Sudan) Arabic fiction 1945–2000LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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