Thoene, Bodie. The Gates of Zion.
Bethany House; 1986.
ISBN: 0871238705
Reader’s Annotation
In 1947, a young American photojournalist, Ellie Warne come to Jerusalem and gets caught up in a dangerous web of intrigue, even as thousands of misplaced Jews from all over Europe look for a place to call home.
Plot Summary
After World War II, thousands of displaced Jews across Europe had no place to call home. Having endured the unspeakable horrors of the Holocaust, they looked toward Jerusalem. Under the control of the British Mandate, Palestine was a powder keg of tension. One young American woman, Ellie, is a photojournalist who recently arrived in Jerusalem to stay with her archeologist father. When some Bedouins arrive one day at their house when Ellie’s father is out, they show her some scrolls they have found and want to sell to the doctor. Ellie can’t make that decision, but she does photograph the scrolls. She unwittingly just stepped into a web of conspiracy and intrigue that will threaten her life as “someone” tries to get those pictures. Meanwhile, David, her American military pilot, sometimes boyfriend, comes to Jerusalem to pursue Ellie. David claims to love Ellie, but she is torn between David and Moshe, a handsome Jewish archeologist who works with her father. As the story goes on, the events connected with the scrolls become linked with the events surrounding the founding of the State of Israel.
Critical Evaluation
Many people are unfamiliar with what happened after World War II and to all the Jews who survived the Holocaust. Thoene’s remarkable talent for description brings the story alive so that the reader feels like an actual witness. The Gates of Zion, which is book 1 in The Zion Chronicles, almost immediately captures the reader with the exciting intrigue around Ellie photographing the mysterious scrolls. As the novel progresses, that is the main storyline. However, the historical events and background themselves are just as compelling as the storyline. Descriptions of life under British Mandate are eye-opening, and they provide a little more understanding of current events in that region. Told with an admittedly pro-Israel bent, The Zion Chronicles are an adventure in the purest historical fiction tradition. A great follow-up read for The Zion Chronicles is Herman Wouk’s The Hope and The Glory.
Information about the Author
Bodie Thoene (pronounced “Tay-nee”) claims that she has always wanted to be a writer. However, early in school it was discovered that she suffered from the learning disorder, dyslexia. Thoene’s mother refused to take the diagnosis lying down, and instead retained a young teacher to work extensively with Thoene. Born in Bakersfield, CA, Thoene was a political science/journalism major when she attended college in San Jose, CA. She covered much of the unrest in the Bay Area during the turbulent Vietnam era for U.S. News and World Report. After Bodie married Brock and settled in Waco, TX, where Bodie attended Baylor University, she kept writing. Bodie describes how she had the opportunity to speak to John Wayne in 1978 about her interest in the event surrounding the rebirth of Israel, and that she’d someday like to write a novel about it. He told her, "That’s one you ought to do. It’s the story of the Jewish Alamo!" For more information, go to Thoene Books.
Genre
Adventure
Historical Fiction
Curriculum Tie-ins
History
Booktalk Ideas
- Discuss how the Jewish people were treated by the British under the Mandate. Do you think those laws were fair?
- Moshe or David?
- What did you learn about history that you had never heard before?
Reading level/Interest age
Adult Crossover
Challenge Issues/Challenge Response Ideas
Relgion/Christian Fiction
Why I included this work
This series has a lot of little-known historical background describing what happened to the Jews after the Holocaust. It also has an exciting plot of intrigue and danger, with a little romance thrown in!
ECPA Gold Medallion Award (Fiction,1987)
Great Quote from the Book:
"Hope" is knowing the truth and acting on it.”
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