Fifteen-year-old Megan Laughlin has a gift; or what seems like a curse at times. Megan sees angels and demons. Megan knows her destiny is to protect her friends against dark angels who try to sway them into situations that can destroy their souls, their lives, and their eternity.
At school, she recognizes Judas, another popular boy, as a demon hell-bent on destroying her and everyone she loves. As Judas spreads horrible rumors and overdoses two of her classmates at a rave, Megan realizes the enormity of his power. While classmates die, Megan, with the help of an angel, Johnny, and a team of friends will face the fight of their lives as they battle Judas. Megan thinks God hasn't given her any "special" powers, but discovers she has what she needs as she confronts Judas and his seemingly unconquerable power.
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AS FORETOLD BY ANCIENT PROPHETS, an apocalypse destroyed Earth during the twenty-first century. But two thousand years later Elyon set upon the earth a new Adam. This time, however, He gave humanity an advantage. What was once unseen became seen. It was good and it was called...Green.
But the evil Teeleh bided his time in a Black Forest. Then, when least expected, a twenty-four year old named Thomas Hunter fell asleep in our world and woke up in that future Black Forest. A gateway was opened for Teeleh to ravage the land. Devastated by the ruin, Thomas Hunter and his Circle swore to fight the dark scourge until their dying breath.
But now The Circle has lost hope. Samuel, Thomas Hunter's cherished son, has turned his back on his father. He gathers the dark forces to wage a final war. Thomas is crushed and desperately seeks a way back to our reality to find the one elusive hope that could save them all.
Enter an apocalyptic story like none you have read. A story with links to our own history so shocking that you will forget you are in another world at all. Welcome to GREEN. Book Zero.
Statistics
Title - Green
Author - Ted Dekker
Genre - Fantasy/Suspense
Publication Date - September, 2009
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Noted for the painstaking research behind her historical fiction, an atheist of 36 years makes a surprising discovery when she turns her attention to the mystery of the historical Jesus
Every novel I’ve ever written since 1974 involved historical research. It’s been my delight that no matter how many supernatural elements were involved in the story, and no matter how imaginative the plot and characters, the background would be thoroughly historically accurate. And over the years, I’ve become known for that accuracy. If one of my novels is set in Venice in the eighteenth century, one can be certain that the details as to the opera, the dress, the milieu, the values of the people- all of this is correct.
Without ever planning it, I’ve moved slowly backwards in history, from the nineteenth century, where I felt at home in my first two novels, to the first century, where I sought the answers to enormous questions that became an obsession with me that simply couldn’t be ignored. Ultimately, the figure of Jesus Christ was at the heart of this obsession.
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Spending a summer holiday in Italy, Sebastian Barnack - a handsome English schoolboy and aspiring poet - begins his real education under the tutelage of two very different kinds of teachers. His uncle, an atheist, introduces him to life's more profance pleasures, while a saintly bookseller steers him towards the spiritual, advising that "there's only one corner of the universe you can be certain of improving, and that's your own self." Bitter, witty, and sincere in turns, Time Must Have a Stop is both a satire of a traditional coming-of-age novel and an earnest exploration of what it means to try and lead a good life.
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The Pomeroys and the Kensingtons: Two families at war. To cease the feud they have made an arrangement of marriage. However, prior to the wedding night the bride disappears, her sentries slain. Though her body is never found, the locals insist she now haunts the wedding mansion on the Kensington family estate.
Lazarus Pomeroy is determined to solve the mystery of his fifteen-year-old daughter's disappearance and sends a plea for help to all adventurers for hire.
Para Sedi and Munwar Meek accept the challenge. Now they must not only answer the question of Alicia Pomeroy's disappearance; they must do so without jeopardizing the already tenuous peace.
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One could not ask for more in a philosophy of science treatise that what we find in "The Signature in the Cell." The book is no less than magisterial, an adjective that curmudgeons such as myself seldom use. At every level--philosophical, scientific, historical and literary--it is a superb treatise. Reading every word of its 508 pages of text (not counting endnotes)--as I did--repays the reader greatly.
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