by Susan Barnes | 5 May 2014 | Book Reviews
This book is being featured on the Australian Christian Readers Blog Alliance this week. Information about the author and more details about the book can be found here.Paula has again chosen a challenging theme for the basis of her novel, Imogen’s Chance – a...
by Susan Barnes | 30 Sep 2013 | Book Reviews
Piece by piece : unlocking the puzzle for an effective ministry to today’s children is an excellent resource for people working in children’s ministry. By using the illustration of a jigsaw puzzle Tammy Tolman is able to explain the different aspect of children’s...
by Susan Barnes | 14 Aug 2013 | Book Reviews
The Risky Way Home is another captivating story by Paula Vince. It begins with Casey responding to a job advert and reconnecting with an old school friend. In taking up the position she finds herself unexpectedly challenged not only in the job but also in her personal...
by Susan Barnes | 29 Jul 2013 | Book Reviews
Best Forgotten by Paula Vince is a mystery with an unusual twist. While running away from something or someone, Courtney Lockwood is hit by a car and loses his memory. He can’t even remember his own name; let alone what he was running from. It creates other unanswered...
by Susan Barnes | 11 Jun 2013 | Book Reviews
Last week I posted about Paula Vince’s adult fiction novel, Picking up the pieces. Today I am reviewing another of Paula’s books: Quenarden Prophecies, which is completely different. It is a fantasy novel for teenagers and book one of the Quenarden...
by Susan Barnes | 2 Jun 2013 | Book Reviews
Picking up the pieces is being featured on the Australian Christian Readers Blog Alliance this week. Information about the author and more details about the book can be found here. Picking up the pieces is a very brave book, tackling the subject of rape in a Christian...
by Susan Barnes | 30 Apr 2013 | Book Reviews
Paula Vince has tackled a difficult subject in A Design of Gold. The death of a close friend is difficult enough but when the main character feels her actions may have contributed to her friend’s death, it is seriously complicated. Paula handles her subject matter...