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This is the first of a series - the second is Solemn Oath and last is Silent Pledge. Reading them in order is highly recommended!
This wonderful series is centered around a small-town hospital emergency room in Missouri.
The medical parts ring true for a good reason - Hannah Alexander is a pen name for a husband/wife writing team and the husband is an ER physician! These books will appeal to both men and women, and contain suspense, drama, a little romance and a lot of inspiration. I became very attached to the characters of Lukas, Mercy, Clarence, Ivy, and many more. The story also paints a wonderful picture of God's forgiveness and grace in the character of Theodore and others' responses to him.
The only downside to these books is that there are only 3 of them and I've read them all...
Happy reading!
The characters are wonderful and will live in your heart long after you put the book down. Read the other two books in this series, too, which are equally as good.
I enjoyed the very human qualities of the characters -- they were vulnerable yet all had strengths sometimes they didn't even know they had. Even the Christian characters weren't perfect, but true-to-life, especially Dr. Bower whose endearing mishaps only added to the strength of his character.
Sometimes the middle section of a book sags, but that wasn't true with this book. It started out interesting and remained so throughout.
The one disappointment in the end is not knowing what becomes of Lukas's relationship with Mercy. You have to read the other two books to find out!
A thoroughly satisifying book with a strong (though not intrusive) spiritual message.
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Very well written, interesting, informative, humorous and sometimes tragic, The Stars Were Big and Bright is one book that will remain in my personal library for years to come. It is sure to be reread whenever the urge to revisit the history of Texas' contribution to the U.S. Army Air Force's efforts during WWI and WWII.
I was impressed also with the numerous vintage photograps, maps, descriptions of the relevant airfields, aircraft photos and specifications, as well as the high level of documentation from primary source documents.
This book absolutely has to be the best book on this topic yet written. Perhaps the author, Thomas E. Alexander, will treat us to another great book in the future.
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What a wonderful tool to have especially when you are forced to rest and when your main goal is to recuperate.
I would recommend this meaningful treasure to all who desire self-improvement and rapid healing. I personally experienced both! Thanks Chris!
CREATING EXTRAORDINARY JOY moves the reader towards the synergy found in creating a whole that is greater than the sum of its parts. The different steps along the way, the various excerises and the many people you meet through a sharing of their individual stories combine to form a kind of road map. The journey revisits family and friends, goals and passions, guilts and fears. The destination is finally reached when you realize you're back where you started. The Genie is not out there...he's inside you...waiting to be freed.
An intelligent and insightful work, Chris Alexander has something for everyone at every point along their personal path to creating extraordinary joy.
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Beyond the story of a man who endures everything, I also enjoyed the narrative on the internal problems of the Soviet communist system. Whereas most of my knowledge of the USSR is based on the American Media, this book put a face and a heart around cold war russians.
The book began to drag near then end, but overall an amazing book. I would recommend this book to anyone interested in Survival, simple torture, and Cold-War Russia.
That said, I really enjoy these Man vs. World accounts. This book is the tale of an American kidnapped by the Soviets and held in Russia for years. His tale of the tortures he and his fellow prisoners endure will make you question how a man can survive so much with his sanity intact.
Dolgun does a wonderful job portraying prison life and despair and how prisoners cope with horrific limitations. His accounts of the people and places he experienced in Russia are as penetrating as a Dostoyevsky or Dickens. If you're interested in the Gulag, this is a much more accessible work than any of those by Sozhenitsyn with the exception of "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich". That account is fictional; this account is not.
I note that you can buy a good used copy for a buck here on Amazon. Spend that buck and be amazed that this book didn't make anyone's top 5 list of adventure stories.
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One of Fr. Schmemann's great legacies to Orthodoxy in America --and indeed, the world-- was the energy he put into revitalizing the sacramental spirit of its people. 'For the Life of the World' is a book which seeks just that goal: to remind Christians of their Eucharistic centre, and open their eyes to a way of living life 'sacramentally.' It is a book that discusses the heart of Orthodox theology, yet it is a simple book. It is a book that discusses the greatest mysteries of creation, yet in the most personal of manners.
There are few books which, in so few pages, can make so great an impact on their readers. So strong was its spiritual impact when first published as a paper, that this book was hand-translated into common Russian and smuggled into that country to serve as a help for the persecuted faithful.
'For the Life of the World' is one book that, truly, no heartfelt Christian person should be without.
One, the text works well for laity who have little academic training, but want a truly deeply provoking book on the sacramental and liturgictal life of the Church. Secondly, it is written well enough for academics to read and pondure insightful scholarship on doctrines such as the Eucharist and its revelance when looking at the creation, man's present condition, and the Kingdom of God. Further, it gives a perspective not often read about in Western Protestant circles and brings historical tecahings into a mystical, yet, understandable (though not completely comprehendable) way. This may appeal to Western Christians who want mystery, but are afraid of leaviing there mind at the door.
This book is a must read. Edifying for all, whether Protestant, Catholic, or Orthodox.
To Glory We Steer is set in the waning months of the American Revolution. Yorktown has been lost and the French under Admiral DeGrasse are looking to extend the victory and drive the British out of the Caribbean. Bolitho is sent to the Caribbean in command of a ship in which a mutiny was put down. The officers and men are all questionable. Can Richard Bolitho assume command, obtain the loyalty of his men and administer a caning to the French? Of course he can but the fun is in watching him do it.
The Bolitho novels are cast in the post-romantic mode. Kent excels at action as his titles imply. However, the author knows what real war is like and doesn't flinch in describing the effects of cutlasses and grapeshot on human flesh. Given that the novel was first published during the height of the Vietnam War, it's hard to imagine that Kent could have written To Glory We Steer any other way.
Kent keeps sex out of To Glory We Steer following MacLean's dictum that it interfers with the action. In fact, there are no women at all in the book. One sailor's wife has significance to the plot but she doesn't enter the action. To Glory We Steer is a manly book about manly men doing manly things.
To Glory We Steer is not as polished as the novels that followed and in my view suffers from one climax too many. The Battle of the Saintes should be the climax of the novel and it loses some of its punch because of earlier action. Also, there are some opportunities missed because Kent wrote the series out of chronological order. For instance, he meets another officer named Dancer. Having read Richard Bolitho-Midshipman and Richard Bolitho and the 'Avenger', my first thought was that Bolitho would say, "I served with a Martyn Dancer..." or something to that effect. However, there is no mention of the earlier Dancer. These are minor foibles.
It's a little rough around the edges but it's still a great start to great series. Kent novels make an excellent guilty pleasure.
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When i had finished (by the way i read the whole thing in two sittings)i started flipping to random pages and found myself practically reading the whole thing all over again.
I do not speak Russian but have read many Russian books and this really does stand out as being amazing.
If you are thinking of reading this book you needn't think twice about it.