There may have been some magic in the way he rescues her from a famine cottage in Ireland to a log cabin in the American wilderness. But in saving her life is he stealing her soul? This is a brutal story of Irish immigration, richly illustrated, based on a mix of fact, superstition, and imagination-not for the faint of heart.
The wolf will dwell with the lamb... and a little boy will lead them. Isaiah 11:6. What if this figurative language about mankind after Christ returns, like much of the Bible, is also true literally? In this fictional story a couple of gifted teenagers are about to find out.
From bulldogging to cat fighting, this small-town rodeo is fertile ground for cultivating high drama-young love, sin and sacrifice. Mildly allegorical, here the Bride of Christ grapples with age-old questions from the Beatitudes, the Armor of God, and the Seven Churches in Revelation.
In this fast-paced allegory the KING rides through a wintry countryside to seek his lost subjects. He sends messengers ahead to prepare the way-but one runs into troubled hearts and a wicked dragon. In humble cottages this soldier discovers something mystifying about divine sovereignty and his own free will. Would he be able to survive the great battle at the end? The story comes complete with quotations from The Holy Scriptures.
The Dollhouse Trilogy concludes as Mary discovers real love and as a bonus, the true meaning of life. Even more importantly, she experiences new birth in a simple act of faith.
I thought my little sister was crazy to keep going up on the third floor without permission. Our Aunt was strict and even scary at times. I didn't believe Katherine's fantastic story until I followed her up there myself-and found something very disturbing.