book cover of Lost Disciple
 

Lost Disciple

(1989)
The Book of Demas
A novel by

 
 
Publisher's Weekly
Whitten, prize-winning reporter and author ( A Day Without Sunshine ), here imaginatively reconstructs the tumultuous career of Demas, a disciple of the Apostle Paul, who is mentioned only three times in the New Testament. According to his record in the fictional Thessalonian Apograph, Demas was the well-born son of Roman-Jewish parents who turned reluctantly to the teachings of Jesus as they were articulated by a young woman whom he later married, and by other followers of Christianity in the Roman province of Judea. Both attracted and repelled by the charismatic Paul, a ''scolding runt . . . and the bearer of words about love,'' Demas struggles with his identity, and with his ambivalence about the Jesus story, eventually leaving Paul to follow his own mission. Richly embroidered scenes of violence, lust and eroticism capture the colorful early panorama of the Middle East as Whitten weaves his powerful story about a provocative, tirelessly questioning voyager.

Library Journal
The same story is different when told by two, three, or four storytellers, as Whitten shows in relating the Jesus history as told by the men who wrote the books of the New Testament. Myth, mysticism, fact, are told through the eyes of the very human men who recorded this history. Whitten excels as reporter and storyteller in his well-researched chronicle of Demas, the Lost Disciple (mentioned three times in the New Testament). Men's observations of history are revealed as inseparable from their own dogmatic egos. Whitten's brilliance is in his observation of how little humanity has evolved over 20 centuries of interpreting prophets and politics. Highly recommended.-- M. J. Hethcoat, San Francisco, Cal.


Genre: Western

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