My desire in my novels is to take the reader into the world of what is and what might be.
By Joel C.
Mom made reading a treat. Like most kids, I’d pester her for my favorite things. After my fiftieth request for a new Hot Wheels car, she finally said, “Tell you what—I’ll buy you any book you want.
We often labor under the illusion that everything depends on us or on those around us. But it doesn’t. Everything depends on God. And this is the great lesson that rest has to teach us.
Our brains are wired to keep doing what we’ve always done—but we can change the ruts into superhighways of success.
As we near the end of our lives and glance back, the most disappointing things we see may not be the things we didn’t do so wonderfully; they may be the wonderful things we intended to do but never began.
Charlotte
Expecting Better by Emily Oster
My husband and I recently found out that we are expecting a little girl! As someone who is averse to self-help books and the like (I did not read 16 marriage books before my wed
Christians cannot blame nominal believers as a way to avoid dealing with the very real and destructive contributions we have made to the Age of Outrage.
I have spent my life reading. Truly. I can’t remember a time when I wasn’t thinking about books and starting a new book or planning what I was going to read next.
The feeling of anger is just a feeling, neither good nor bad; it’s part of what it is to be human.
Here’s how I know when I’ve gone too far. When I get so overwhelmed with busyness that my spiritual growth stagnates, that’s a huge red flag.