Difference between revisions of "Adara (2002 Gormley), novel"

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[[Category:2002|*Gormley]]
[[Category:2002| Gormley]]
[[Category:Fiction|2002 Gormley]]
[[Category:Literature|2002 Gormley]]
[[Category:Novels|2002 Gormley]]


[[Category:Juvenile Audience|2002 Gormley]]
[[Category:Women Authorship--2000s|2002 Gormley]]
[[Category:Women Authorship--English |2002 Gormley]]
 
[[Category:Fiction--2000s|2002 Gormley]]
[[Category:Fiction--English |2002 Gormley]]
 
[[Category:Literature--2000s|2002 Gormley]]
[[Category:Literature--English|2002 Gormley]]
 
[[Category:Juvenile Literature|2002 Gormley]]
[[Category:Juvenile novels|2002 Gormley]]
 
[[Category:English language--2000s|2002 Gormley]]
 
[[Category:Hebrew Bible Studies--2000s|2002 Gormley]]
[[Category:Hebrew Bible Studies--Fiction |2002 Gormley]]
[[Category:Hebrew Bible Studies--English |2002 Gormley]]  


[[Category:American Fiction|2002 Gormley]]
[[Category:American Literature|2002 Gormley]]


[[Category:English language|2002 Gormley]]
[[Category:Made in the 2000s|*2002 Gormley]]


[[Category:Elisha (subject)|2002 Gormley]]
[[Category:Elisha (subject)|2002 Gormley]]
[[Category:Elisha--fiction (subject)|2002 Gormley]]
[[Category:Elisha--fiction (subject)|2002 Gormley]]
[[Category:Elisha--literature (subject)|2002 Gormley]]
[[Category:Elisha--literature (subject)|2002 Gormley]]

Latest revision as of 05:21, 20 May 2017

<bibexternal title="Adara" author="Gormley"/>

Adara (2002) is a novel by Beatrice Gormley.

Abstract

Juvenile audience.

"A slave girl convinces her master, the mighty Syrian general, Naaman, to seek a cure from his leprosy from the prophet Elisha in this novelization of the Old Testament story ... Adara has always longed to do the things that well-brought-up girls of her time are not supposed to do. She wants to learn to read and write -- like men. And she wants the freedom to travel -- like men -- outside the boundaries of her sheltered life. One day she awakens to a blast of trumpets as the Israelites and Arameans battle just outside the safety of her village walls. Curious, Adara sneaks out to see the battle. Little does she know that this will be her last day of freedom for a very long time. Sold into slavery, Adara becomes a servant to General Namaan and his family and begins a remarkable journey of self-discovery, healing, and redemption -- a journey that, in the end, faces her with the hardest decision of her life ."--Publisher description.

Editions

Published in Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans Books for Young Readers, 2002.

External links

  • [ Google Books]