cover image Jezebel

Jezebel

Megan Barnard. Penguin, $17 trade paper (304p) ISBN 978-0-14-313767-2

Barnard reimagines the biblical story of Queen Jezebel in her ambitious but muddled debut. Jezebel, daughter of Ithobaal, the king of Tyre, decides at six years old that she wants her name to be remembered for the ages. At 12, she has a priestess divine her future and learns she will be married to a foreign king, a prediction validated when Ithobaal promises her to Ahab, son of the king of Israel, to strengthen Tyre’s geopolitical standing. The marriage, which exiles Jezebel from her homeland, is an unhappy one, but she finds solace in the arms of Ahab’s friend and scribe, Elijah. When Elijah calls down the Israelite God’s wrath on the kingdom, ostensibly because of its monarch’s wickedness, a multiyear drought ensues. The details here are a bit fuzzy—it’s not clear how the Israelites, including the king and queen, have enough drinkable water to survive, or why, with the royal court unable to afford fancy imported foods, merchants would travel to the country to sell them. The early sections depicting Jezebel’s yearning are the strongest, though Barnard has less success with the biblical stuff. It’s a provocative concept, but the author’s revisionist choices don’t always pan out. Agent: Jim McCarthy, Dystel, Goderich & Bourret. (Aug.)