The Bronze Bow

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The Bronze Bow
Image:Kit0395137195-1-.gif
Cover
Author Elizabeth George Speare
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Children's, Historical novel
Publisher Mifflin Company
Publication date 1989
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 260 pp (first edition, hardback)
ISBN ISBN 0-575-00176-3 (first edition, hardback)

The Bronze Bow is a book by Elizabeth George Speare that won the Newbery Medal for excellence in American children's literature in 1962.

[edit] Plot introduction

Set in Israel of the first century, the lead character, a young man named Daniel Bar Jamin, grows up at the same time as Jesus of Nazareth. Daniel's father was crucified in front of him by the Roman occupiers, so even at the age of eight, he immediately hates and distrusts the Romans and vows that he will avenge his father. His mother dies of grief after her husband's death. Daniel's younger sister Leah was emotionally traumatized because of these events and had never gone out of the house. Since then, the children are both taken in by their grandmother, but as she became ill and more poor over the years, she sells Daniel to Amalek the blacksmith. However, Daniel escapes to the mountains because of his cruel master and meets up with Rosh, the leader of an outlaw band of rebels in the mountains. Five years after these events, he meets two old childhood friends; Joel bar Hezron and his twin sister Malthace. Their meeting causes a series of events, including when Daniel was to go and help his demon-possessed sister when their grandmother passes away and the time when he meets up with a fictionalized version of Jesus Christ, who ends up helping Leah.

[edit] Critical views

The book has been criticised by some Jewish groups for a hostile depiction of Judaism and an idealized version of Christianity. For more details, please see:

Preceded by
Island of the Blue Dolphins
Newbery Medal recipient
1962
Succeeded by
A Wrinkle in Time
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