Reza Aslan, the author of “Zealot,” a provocative new biography of
Jesus, has found an inadvertent ally in generating book publicity: Fox
News.
In an interview on Friday that was by turns bizarre and uncomfortable,
Lauren Green, a host from “Spirited Debate,” a weekly Fox News webcast,
pressed Mr. Aslan on the question of why, as a Muslim, he would choose Jesus as his subject.
“You’re a Muslim, so why did you write a book about the founder of Christianity?” Ms. Green asked.
“Well, to be clear,” Mr. Aslan said, his eyebrows lifting up in
surprise, “I am a scholar of religions with four degrees, including one
in the New Testament, and fluency in biblical Greek, who has been
studying the origins of Christianity for two decades, who also just
happens to be a Muslim.”
The nearly 10-minute video clip quickly entered the Internet bloodstream on Saturday after it was posted on Buzzfeed with the irresistibly clickable headline, “Is This The Most Embarrassing Interview Fox News Has Ever Done?”
Since then, the Buzzfeed page featuring the video has been viewed nearly
four million times. Mr. Aslan quickly amassed an additional 5,000
Twitter followers. On Monday, Random House, Mr. Aslan’s publisher, said
the interview had clearly helped the book: in two days, sales increased
35 percent.
On Friday, “Zealot” was in the No. 8 spot on Amazon.com, the nation’s
biggest seller of books; by Sunday, it had hit No. 1.
Random House is rushing to meet the surge in demand for the book. On
Monday, the publisher ordered 50,000 copies, bringing the total to
150,000 copies in print by the end of the week.
An investigation of the historical Jesus, “Zealot” has been praised by
many reviewers since its publication on July 16. In a review in Tablet
magazine, Adam Kirsch called “Zealot” a “coherent and often convincing
portrait of who Jesus was and what he wanted.”
But some conservative critics have suggested that the book is not a work
of scholarship, but merely “an educated Muslim’s opinions about Jesus
and the ancient Near East,” as John S. Dickerson, an opinion columnist, wrote on FoxNews.com last week.
The reaction to the book has spread to Mr. Aslan’s Amazon page: on The Atlantic Wire, Alexander Nazaryan pointed out
that browsing through dozens of one-star reviews on Amazon revealed
that “plenty of readers of what seems to be a fundamentalist/Evangelical
persuasion are furious that a Muslim published a book about
Christianity’s origins.”
The book was already selling steadily before the FoxNews.com
interview on Friday. Since the release of “Zealot,” Mr. Aslan has hit
the publicity circuit, discussing the book on “The Daily Show” on Comedy
Central, “Morning Joe” on MSNBC and “Weekend Edition” on NPR. “Zealot”
had its debut at No. 4 on the New York Times print hardcover best-seller
list that will appear in print on Aug. 4.
In a telephone interview, Mr. Aslan said that in three weeks of his book
tour, he had received an “overwhelmingly positive” response to his
work, and that it was anything but an attack on Christianity.
“I hope that people recognize that your faith, as Jesus said, is
supposed to be built on a rock, not on sand,” he said. “I guess my
message is: Relax.”
Mr. Aslan was born in Iran, moved to the United States with his family
as a child and later earned degrees from Santa Clara University, Harvard
and the University of Iowa. He is an associate professor of creative
writing at the University of California, Riverside.
Book Passage, a bookstore with two outlets in the Bay Area, hosted Mr.
Aslan for a signing last week. Karen West, the director of events, said
more than 250 people attended it. But the Fox News interview, she said,
has exposed the book to consumers who aren’t regular book buyers.
“It’s moved now out of the NPR realm and it’s gotten into the broader culture,” she said.
A spokeswoman for Fox News did not respond to an e-mail seeking comment.
Mr. Aslan said that after reading Mr. Dickerson’s essay on FoxNews.com, he was prepared for a similar line of attack from Ms. Green.
He was so eager to promote the book on Fox News that his publisher tried
— in vain — to secure an interview spot on “Fox & Friends,” a
morning show.
“I’ll be perfectly honest — I’m thrilled at the response that people
have had to the interview,” Mr. Aslan said. “You can’t buy this kind of
publicity.”