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Christopher Moore’s “Lamb”

The book­club picked Chris­topher Moore’s Lamb: The Gos­pel Accord­ing to Biff, Christ’s Child­hood Pal as our Decem­ber book — the tim­ing being roughly appro­pri­ate. The book is a fanci­ful novel, depict­ing Christ’s life in a some­what pre­pos­ter­ous but enjoy­able way. It spends most of its time in the 30 years between Christ’s birth and the begin­ning of his min­istry, and has extra­vag­ant stor­ies told in a light-hearted way, as would befit someone who was a nor­mal human try­ing to cope with being Christ’s friend.

Most of the book­club mem­bers enjoyed the book, but there was a def­in­ite cor­rel­a­tion between know­ledge of the Gos­pels and the level of enjoy­ment. Those who knew how the Gos­pel authors had depic­ted any given event found the occa­sion­ally almost far­cical altern­at­ive ver­sion funny, whereas the oth­ers didn’t quite get it in sev­eral cases. We spent some time at book­club com­par­ing the ver­sions of stor­ies, dis­cuss­ing the real role of Mary Mag­dalene and the fact that she wasn’t a har­lot (des­pite what the Cath­olic Church and vari­ous trans­la­tions of the Bible claimed), touch­ing on the “Holy Blood, Holy Grail” and “da Vinci Code” ver­sions of Christ’s rela­tion­ship with Mary Mag­dalene, and pos­tu­lat­ing why Levit­i­cus has so many laws about beha­viour with animals.

Chris­topher Moore was wor­ried about the church reac­tion to the book, but it was, I gather, almost exclus­ively pos­it­ive. The book does depict Christ (Joshua) in a pos­it­ive way; Joshua is very human as well as being divine. He gets angry at God, cares about his friends, is slightly naive and very curi­ous. The descrip­tions of his beha­viour dif­fer from those in the Gos­pels by includ­ing more of the emo­tion, which makes Joshua more like­able and more approach­able. The book won’t make any­one become a Chris­tian, but it won’t turn them off, either.