The war romance of the Salvation Army / by Evangeline Booth and Grace Livingston Hill
Material type:
TextPublication details: Illinois : Tyndale House, 1991Edition: Tyndale House editions 1991Description: 329 pages : 18 cmISBN: - 031809005996
- 813
- D639.S15 B6
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| Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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Footprints International School Library Network Toul Kork Campus | Fiction | HIL Fic PS3515.I485 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | FIS00818 |
Grace Livingston Hill (1865-1947) was an early 20th Century "Christian Romance" novelist. She was immensely popular in the time that she wrote, contributing hundreds of novels and short stories during her lifetime. Her characters were most often young female ingenues, frequently strong Christian women or those who become so within the confines of the story. Graces messages are quite simplistic in nature: good versus evil. As Grace believed the Bible was very clear about what was good and what was evil in life, she reflected that cut-and-dried design in her own works. She touched on subjects such as infidelity, defiance, hard-heartedness towards God, and deception, to name just a few. Grace wrote about them all and could manage a happy, or at least satisfactory, ending to any situation. Jesus, the ever-present (though unseen) reoccurring character, manages to heal or mend any situation Grace imagined. It was no wonder that in her days she was known as the "Queen of Christian Romance. " Her works include: The Girl from Montana (1908), The Mystery of Mary (1911) and Lo, Michael (1913).
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