

While discussing motherhood with one of her son’s wives, she asks herself if God fully understands the ramifications of what he’s done: “Naamah wonders if God has considered this: women so distrustful of Him that they might never bear children for the new world.” Blake’s writing is deeply feminist. Naamah does not possess blind faith she is angry and distrustful of Him and what He has done and can do.

She can’t understand why everything had to die, why Noah and she were chosen to repopulate the Earth, or what will happen when (or if) the waters recede. Naamah’s inability to trust God or his plan pulses through the novel. Headstrong and protective, Naamah struggles while on the ark: with caring for the animals, missing the land, losing her lover (and friend), and questioning her faith. In the wake of the devastation, the family must grapple with the world they’ve left behind, survive their current reality, and prepare for the future. “When someone dies and you forget how they look or how they laughed, that is how they forgot the land.” So begins the story of Naamah, Noah, and their family after the Great Flood. A retelling of Noah’s Ark centered around Noah’s wife, Naamah-the woman who helped reshape the world with her hands.
