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Other editions of book The Garden

  • The Garden

    Elsie V. Aidinoff

    Hardcover (HarperTeen, April 13, 2004)
    In the beginning ...There was the Serpent, there for Eve's awakening, and for all the days since. Teacher, mentor, companion, friend, and more. There was God. The Creator. Quick to anger. Dangerous. Majestic. There was Adam: as God said, a joy to behold.And there was Eve.These four hold the future in their hands. And only Eve -- or perhaps the Serpent, too -- wonders what lies outside the Garden of Eden. Passionate, witty, beautifully drawn, and utterly unforgettable, The Garden, a debut novel, remakes and offers insights into a story that forms a cornerstone of our understanding.
  • The Garden

    Elsie V. Aidinoff

    Paperback (HarperTeen, May 10, 2005)
    In the beginningThere was the Serpent, there for Eve's awakening, and for all the days since. Teacher, mentor, companion, friend, and more.There was God. The Creator. Quick to anger. Dangerous. Majestic.There was Adam: as God said, a joy to behold.And there was Eve.These four hold the future in their hands. And only Eve -- or perhaps the Serpent, too -- wonders what lies outside the Garden of Eden.
  • Garden

    Elsie V. Aidinoff

    Paperback (Definitions, April 1, 2007)
    When the book opens, Eve, who is the narrator, is just coming into consciousness. She has been given by God to the Serpent to raise. Her sense of wonder as the Serpent introduces her to life in Paradise is a strength of the book; she learns about nature, love and the way that the new and fascinating world works. When she comes into contact with God - who rears Adam - she is wary of his dominance and egotism. One day, becoming impatient to discover whether or not he's designed the male and female to procreate properly, God rushes Adam and Eve into intercourse. The Serpent alone recognizes the consequences of God's act. 'Until today Eve has felt...that the world was good...' but 'Adam as good as raped her.' Eve is devastated by the experience. Eve leaves the Garden to gain some distance from God and to discover what exists in the outside world; the Serpent accompanies her. They make several journeys - one to a volcano, one to a desert, one to a mountain range and one to the sea (where Eve swims out to sea against the instructions of the Serpent and nearly drowns). On their return to the Garden, the roots of the apple tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil begin to grow; the Serpent sensing that time is running out to teach Eve that love making is good, changes into a man and makes love to her with great sensitivity. After this, she is prepared to accept her role as the mother of humankind. God is outraged by Eve's and also Adam's interest in the tree of knowledge. He is at his capricious worst: everything must bow to his wishes. They realise that if they are to have any freedom of will, they must leave God and the garden. The Serpent warns them that this will involve future suffering, but Eve feels she must develop and be her own person. They go forth...
  • The Garden

    Elsie V. Aidinoff

    Library Binding (HarperTeen, April 1, 2004)
    Offers readers a look at the life of Eve in the Garden of Eden as she tries to come to terms with her existence, the impact she will have on the world, and the future that has been planned for her by God as the mother of humankind.
  • Garden

    Elsie V. Aidinoff

    Hardcover (Doubleday, Aug. 16, 2006)
    None
  • Garden by Elsie Aidinoff

    Elsie Aidinoff

    Hardcover (Random House Childre 2006-02-02, Aug. 16, 2006)
    None
  • The Garden

    Elsie V. Aidinoff

    Hardcover (Frances Lincoln, April 1, 2004)
    None
  • The Garden

    Elsie V. Aidinoff

    Hardcover (Harpercollins Childrens Books, Aug. 16, 2004)
    None