Christin's script focuses on four periods of Moses's life, and each shows the man in different positive and negative lights. In the early chapters, hubris is what makes Moses a questionable character, whereas his secretly held opinions come out in the light much more clearly as the book goes on. Despite him bring brought down by said hubris, Chrisin portrays it as really being a shift in media perception that brings him down. It is an interesting way to look at it; when Moses's life is viewed through the prism of public opinion, his story is far more linear and easier to plot than when it is viewed through actual successes. Read Full Review
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