From Publishers Weekly
In 1994, ODonnell left his Boston life as a high-profile investment executive and took his family to Indiana, where he accepted a position teaching business at a small Christian college. He thought that the familys greatest challenge would be learning to live on a fifth of their former income. But within months of their move, his wife, Lizzie, was diagnosed with stage-three breast cancer and given only a few months to live. This booka collection of letters written to friends back East from 1994 to 1996 to galvanize a prayer network on Lizzies behalfchronicles dark days of illness, fear and spiritual doubt. There are times when ODonnell rages against God and other times when he manifests a deep acceptance of the situation. He also eloquently berates the superficial Christianity that is quick to spout platitudes about Gods will. ODonnell closes with an afterword, noting the miracle that Lizzie is still alive after battling surgeries, heart attacks, blood disorders, pneumonia and kidney failure. This is a mature and gritty account of wrestling with God and what it means to be a "new creation."
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Review
If you are weary of pie-in-the-sky platitudes or superficial solutions this book will be a breath of fresh air. --
Dr. Gary Oliver, Board of Directors, Promise KeepersThis is a mature and gritty account of wrestling with God and what it means to be a "new creation." --
Publishers Weekly
See all Editorial Reviews