![]() Thus, a story of love and loss, of jealousy and of death.Ĭonsequently, more than 2000 years after the Biblical tale was written, Jeffrey Archer takes it upon himself to re-write the ultimate story of sibling rivalry one which certainly mirrors the that of the Biblical brothers. When Abel’s offering is more favourably received, Cain, in a rage of jealousy, kills him. ![]() Cain offers his land’s produce Abel, some of his flock. Taken from the book of Genesis, it tells the story of brothers Cain, a farmer and Abel, a shepherd, who make offerings to the Lord. Just before beginning Archer’s debut novel, I called my father, the walking encyclopedia, to enquire about the biblical tale of Cain and Abel in case it should be of relevance to Archer’s Kane and Abel. And so, eager to discover why it had sold more than a million copies in its first week, and indeed why everyone barring myself seemed to have heard of Archer’s most famous novel, I sat down to read. ![]() ![]() Thus, when I ordered Kane and Abel by Jeffrey Archer, purely on the basis of its entry in the BBC’s Big Read, I was amazed to hear that a number of people I knew had read it, and even my anti-book colleague Eleanor had an unread copy of it lurking around her flat. It seems a fitting end to my first month of blogging, and indeed the last day of my January book challenge, that I review the first book I’ve read this year that has really blown me away.Īs an avid reader, it always surprises me when I come across a well-known book or author that I’m not familiar with. ![]()
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