Elijah the Tishbite
by
Book Details
About the Book
Elijah the Tishbite is a drama about one of the most zealous, charismatic, and fearless prophets in the Hebrew Bible. Elijah, the ultimate anti-establishment man, often risked his life denouncing King Ahab and his foreign wife, Jezebel, who brazenly sought to establish her Sidonian Ba’al cult in Samaria. The play dramatizes major episodes succinctly narrated in the book of Kings. Among these are Elijah’s despair at his people’s wavering faith, his flights and wanderings, the devastating drought ravaging the country, the contest between Adonai and Ba’al on Mount Carmel, the heinous conspiracy and murder of Naboth the Jezreelite, the rise of the revolutionary Jehu, and the assassination of Jezebel. The play also touches on Jehu’s eventual liquidation of Omri’s dynasty and the measures he had to take to eradicate idol worship in the Northern Kingdom.
About the Author
Victor Sasson grew up in Baghdad. He is British educated, with academic degrees from the University of London, and a Ph.D. from New York University. He is an Associate Member of the Columbia University Seminar on Shakespeare, and a former Fellow of the Royal Asiatic Society. A biblical scholar and specialist in Hebrew and Aramaic Epigraphy, he has also published fiction and non-fiction. His two verse plays, Shylock of Venice and King Caliban, were published in 2012 and 2013, respectively; and his Collected Poems appeared in 2017.