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The Anonymous Prayer Project is a tender, funny novel full of the kind of hope that costs something.
Perfect for book clubs, women's ministry groups, and anyone who has ever been brave enough to let someone pray for them.
Ellie Harper is the quiet engine of the Charleston Inter-Church Outreach Center — dependable, warm, and skilled at making herself invisible. When she designs the Anonymous Prayer Project, a twelve-week initiative pairing strangers from five local churches to pray for each other anonymously, she plans to coordinate it flawlessly from the background. She does not plan to participate.
Her director signs her up anyway.
Each Monday, a new theme arrives: Identity. Fear. Compassion. Their Heart. Forgiveness. And each week, Ellie discovers that the curriculum she wrote for everyone else has been waiting to find her. Her anonymous partner — careful, honest, and unexpectedly perceptive — writes back in ways that make her feel known in a way she'd stopped expecting.
She doesn't know it's Caleb.
Caleb Brooks, her quiet, steady coworker, figured out it was Ellie around Week Six. He kept writing anyway — because she needed it to stay anonymous a little longer, and he was willing to wait.
Set among the live oaks and salt-marsh warmth of Charleston, South Carolina, The Anonymous Prayer Project is a story about the prayers we send into the dark and what we find when the light comes on. It's about chronic illness and the courage it takes to receive care. It's about a mother who texts Bible verses followed immediately by photos of dogs in sombreros. It's about a guarded teenager who shows up because someone finally did for him. And it's about two people discovering that being fully known — by God, by a stranger, by someone who's been right there all along — is the thing they were most afraid of and most needed.
For readers who love:
✦ Slow-burn romance grounded in faith and friendship
✦ Characters who are quietly brave and deeply real
✦ Stories about community, belonging, and being seen
✦ Christian fiction that takes faith — and humor — seriously
✦ The warmth of a Southern setting with the depth of real transformation
A faith-based romance about finding love when you've learned to expect loss—and discovering that peace isn't the absence of struggle, but the presence of Someone who never leaves.
She thought chronic pain meant a life alone. He thought one mistake meant he didn't deserve forgiveness. God had other plans.
Helena Young has spent three years managing severe chronic pain in isolation, building a careful life in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho where expectations are low and disappointment is survivable. When a compassionate nurse at her pain management clinic notices the worn research notebooks and the exhaustion she's trying to hide, something shifts—but Helena has learned the hard way that hope costs more than it's worth.
Forrest Sims carries guilt from a medical crisis three years ago that he can't seem to put down. Working at a low-acuity pain clinic, keeping everyone at arm's length, over-preparing for everything—that's safe. That's manageable. Until a patient with silver-blonde hair and radical honesty walks into his treatment room and he realizes some boundaries were made to be crossed.
When they both end up at the same chronic illness support group, their parallel struggles with faith, suffering, and grace begin to interweave. A shared scripture. Small kindnesses. Coffee shop conversations. The terrifying vulnerability of being seen at your worst—and being chosen anyway.
But learning to trust doesn't erase the wounds. When Helena's body betrays another good week with a devastating flare, and Forrest's old crisis replays itself at work, both must decide: do they protect themselves by pulling away, or do they risk everything by showing up imperfect?
Peace Beneath the Pines is an inspirational Christian romance that handles chronic illness, depression, and medical trauma with unflinching honesty and profound grace. For readers who want:
✓ Authentic disability and chronic pain representation
✓ Faith woven naturally into a contemporary love story
✓ Small-town Idaho setting with gorgeous lake and mountain scenery
✓ Slow-burn romance built on emotional intimacy
✓ Clean, closed-door content appropriate for all ages
✓ Characters who wrestle honestly with God and come out stronger
✓ A happily-ever-after that acknowledges suffering doesn't end but shows love persisting through it
Perfect for fans of Francine Rivers, Karen Kingsbury, and readers seeking Christian romance novels that honor both faith and lived experience with chronic illness.
Some love stories aren't about healing. They're about learning that being held is enough.
She saves everyone else. Who will save her?
Mallory Chen has spent five years as a crisis hotline counselor, talking strangers through their darkest moments. She's good at it — expertly trained, deeply committed, completely burned out. When her supervisor mandates two weeks off, Mallory reluctantly agrees to volunteer on the midnight shift of a small church's anonymous prayer line. No names, no crises, just listening. Simple.
Except nothing about it turns out to be simple.
The callers become her anchors. A lonely widow who calls every Thursday. A teenager wrestling with identity in the dark. And then there's the man with the warm, careful voice who calls on Tuesday nights — a widower three years out from loss who chooses his words like he respects their weight. He never gives his name. She never gives hers. But somewhere between midnight and dawn, in the sacred anonymity of that small prayer room, they begin to know each other in ways that names never could have allowed.
But anonymity has limits.
When the midnight shift is threatened with closure, Mallory fights to save the community she didn't know she needed. When the walls between her and Tuesday begin to crack, she has to face the fear she's been running from for eight years — that being truly known means risking being truly rejected.
And when the truth finally comes out, it's bigger than either of them expected.
The Midnight Prayer Line is a deeply moving contemporary Christian romance about burnout and healing, the courage to be vulnerable, and the unexpected places where community — and love — take root. It's about a woman who has spent her whole life pouring into others learning, at last, to let herself be filled.
Themes include: mental health, grief, faith restoration, found family, and the transformative power of simply being heard.
Readers who love Becky Wade, Denise Hunter, and Susan May Warren — or who enjoyed The Midnight Library and Act Your Age, Eve Brown — will find themselves unable to put this one down.
Sometimes the voices in the dark lead us exactly where we need to go.
She saves everyone else. Who will save her?
Mallory Chen has spent five years as a crisis hotline counselor, talking strangers through their darkest moments. She's good at it — expertly trained, deeply committed, completely burned out. When her supervisor mandates two weeks off, Mallory reluctantly agrees to volunteer on the midnight shift of a small church's anonymous prayer line. No names, no crises, just listening. Simple.
Except nothing about it turns out to be simple.
The callers become her anchors. A lonely widow who calls every Thursday. A teenager wrestling with identity in the dark. And then there's the man with the warm, careful voice who calls on Tuesday nights — a widower three years out from loss who chooses his words like he respects their weight. He never gives his name. She never gives hers. But somewhere between midnight and dawn, in the sacred anonymity of that small prayer room, they begin to know each other in ways that names never could have allowed.
But anonymity has limits.
When the midnight shift is threatened with closure, Mallory fights to save the community she didn't know she needed. When the walls between her and Tuesday begin to crack, she has to face the fear she's been running from for eight years — that being truly known means risking being truly rejected.
And when the truth finally comes out, it's bigger than either of them expected.
The Midnight Prayer Line is a deeply moving contemporary Christian romance about burnout and healing, the courage to be vulnerable, and the unexpected places where community — and love — take root. It's about a woman who has spent her whole life pouring into others learning, at last, to let herself be filled.
Some confessions don't always belong in a church. They belong across the street, with a good espresso and someone who knows how to listen.
Maggie Calloway makes excellent coffee and keeps her boundaries clear. She co-owns Common Grounds, the warmest coffee shop on Grover Street, and she's built a life that's deliberately simple: good beans, loyal regulars and a Sunday that belongs only to her. What she doesn't do is religion. Not anymore.
But when people from Grace Community Church—the cheerful brick building across the street—start sitting at her counter with things they can't say anywhere else, Maggie finds herself doing something she never planned: listening. Really listening. And somehow, without credentials or theology or any intention whatsoever, she becomes the person people come to when the church feels too formal and their grief feels too heavy.
Enter Pastor Eli Ward.
He's earnest, self-aware and unexpectedly charming. He makes a perfect cortado at home and has very specific opinions about grind size. When he walks into Common Grounds to understand why his congregation is confessing to the barista instead of him, he doesn't come with territory to protect—he comes with genuine curiosity. And a legal pad he never actually uses.
What begins as an unlikely partnership becomes something neither of them planned for: a slow-burn collaboration that blurs the line between ministry and friendship, between faith and the space just outside it. Because grace, it turns out, doesn't check the address before it shows up. And sometimes the most sacred work happens over coffee, in a room that smells like cardamom and second chances.
A cozy romance about ministry without credentials, love without pretense, and the surprising places grace shows up when you stop looking for it in all the traditional spots.
When the last place you'd look for God turns out to be exactly where you find yourself.
Maggie Thornton has spent six months avoiding church, avoiding grief, and avoiding the well-meaning people who want to help her process the loss of her husband. But when her mother's relentless concern pushes her through the doors of Grace Chapel one Sunday morning, Maggie does what any reasonable person would do: she sits in the last pew on the left and makes herself invisible.
Or so she thinks.
What she doesn't expect is the motley crew of misfits, skeptics, and genuine believers who occupy that back corner every week—people who don't perform faith, they practice it. People like Tom, the sardonic engineer with a complicated past. Rachel, the young mother drowning in expectations. And Pastor David, who preaches like someone who's read the footnotes and found them more interesting than the text.
Week by week, in the space between hymns and potluck dinners, Maggie discovers something she didn't know she was looking for: a community that makes room for doubt, a faith that doesn't require her to have all the answers, and the possibility that healing doesn't mean forgetting—it means learning how to carry what you've lost while still moving forward.
Warm, witty, and achingly honest, Last Pew on the Leftis a novel about finding grace in the last place you'd expect it, and learning that the people who sit in the back of the church might understand faith better than anyone in the front row.
Sixteen-year-old Wren is an expert in the clock above the third pew of Cornerstone Community Church. She's spent her whole life watching it, mouthing hymns, and performing a certainty she can't locate anywhere inside herself.
Then she falls down a staircase at a geology museum. And the world shifts.
Now she can see them: symbols hovering above people's heads whenever they make a claim about belief. Gold for genuine, unwavering faith. Silver sparks for honest doubt woven through real belief. Grey static for performing certainty you don't feel. Black smoke for deliberate deception. And a quiet, clean absence — clear air — for the people who simply refuse to pretend.
What begins as a possible concussion artifact quickly becomes something Wren can't explain away. The symbols are too patterned. Too consistent. Too honest.
As she catalogues what she sees — in the congregation, in her gold-faith mother and her grey-static father, in her rigorously agnostic best friend Simone, and in a boy named Marcus whose silver sparks she can't stop thinking about — Wren begins to understand something she was never taught: there is a profound difference between faith and certainty. Between the performance of belief and the real thing.
PROOF is a coming-of-age story about a girl who learns to read what people actually believe — and discovers, in the process, something small and uncertain and entirely her own.
Perfect for fans of Jandy Nelson, Adam Silvera, and anyone who has ever sat in a room full of people and wondered which kind of believer — or non-believer — they really are.
A Christian family devotional that retells classic fairy tales with gospel-centered meaning — perfect for parents, children, and anyone who loves faith-based stories. Faith & Fairy Tales: The Cross Woven in Story is a beautifully written Christian children’s book that blends classic fairy tales with biblical truth, making it ideal for family devotions, bedtime reading, homeschool and church libraries.
Through ten beloved tales — including Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, Beauty and the Beast, Rapunzel, The Little Mermaid, Snow White, Hansel and Gretel, Jack and the Beanstalk, The Ugly Duckling and Rumpelstiltskin — readers discover how each story echoes themes of redemption, identity, courage and God’s unfailing love.
Each chapter includes:
A fresh, beautifully retold fairy tale
A gospel reflection that reveals how the story points to Scripture
A “Living the Story” devotional with thoughtful questions and a short prayer
A stained‑glass emblem description to enrich the visual imagination
Written with lyrical warmth and spiritual depth, this book helps families see God’s truth woven through stories they already love. It invites readers of all ages to explore themes of grace, transformation, freedom and the identity we find in Christ.
Perfect for:
Christian families
Homeschool and children’s ministry
Bedtime stories
Devotional reading
Gifts for kids, parents & teachers
If you love classic tales, Christian devotionals, or books that spark meaningful conversations about faith, Faith and Fairy Tales will become a treasured part of your home library.
Step into the stories you thought you knew — and discover the Gospel shining through every page.
Curious Brain Candy is a playful feast for the fact-hungry mind. Packed with strange places, quirky science, and mind-bending trivia, this book invites readers ages 10+ to explore the world through bite-sized wonders and interactive surprises. Each themed chapter blends storytelling, mini quizzes, and unexpected twists—perfect for curious kids, tweens, and grown-up trivia lovers alike.
From glowing lakes to bizarre inventions and animal oddities, every page delivers a dose of delight. Whether you're flipping for fun or diving deep into a topic, Curious Brain Candy makes learning feel like play.
Inside you'll find:
Weird and wonderful destinations
Brain teasers and extended learning
Strange creatures and scientific surprises
Mini-stories and playful facts
Perfect for classrooms, road trips, or cozy reading nooks, this book sparks curiosity and celebrates the joy of asking “Wait… is that real?”
Some fences keep cattle in. Some keep everything else out. They look the same from the road.
Missionary nurse Claire Marchand knows how to walk into a community that looks peaceful from a distance and find what’s hidden underneath. Six months ago, she helped dismantle a trafficking network buried in the Louisiana bayou. Now Faith Reach has sent her to Solin, Texas — a Hill Country town of fourteen hundred, a sheriff in his nineteenth year, and a lavender farm called Harvest Fellowship that everyone in the county considers a good neighbor.
Three women have left the community in the past sixteen months. No one can find them.
When a young community mother whispers a name at the clinic door and turns away — do you know a woman named Liesel Brandt? — Claire recognizes the pattern she documented in the bayou. She knows what she’s looking at. She just needs the evidence to prove it.
DEA agent Wade Broussard has no jurisdiction in Texas, no agency resources, and no good reason to drive eight hours to Hill Country on personal leave. He drives anyway. Alongside investigative journalist Rosa Vega, who has been working this story for eight months and has a folder full of names she cannot locate, the three of them begin to build a case around a community elder who genuinely believes what he’s doing — and a placement operator named Dutch Haverford whose network reaches across three states.
In the loft of the east barn, a woman named Liesel Brandt has been keeping a log for seven years. Thirteen names. Photographs. Evidence. She has been waiting for someone who could read the signal she’s been leaving, and now someone has come.
Hill Country Covenant is a novel about the faith that survives in the darkest rooms and the courage it takes to walk out through the open gate. It is also the story of two self-sufficient people — a missionary nurse and a man who has spent ten years operating undercover — learning to stop managing the distance between them and build something real.
Perfect for readers of Lynette Eason, Colleen Coble, and Dani Pettrey who love Christian romantic suspense with high stakes, a layered mystery, and a romance that earns its resolution.
==Standalone story with a satisfying conclusion
==Book Two of the Covenant Series (can be read independently)
==Clean romantic suspense — no explicit content
==Faith-forward with nuanced, non-preachy spiritual themes
True shepherds lay down their lives. False ones build fences.
Missionary nurse Claire Marchand came to the Louisiana bayou to disappear. Eighteen months after her fiancé’s death in a West Africa clinic, she’s been running — from grief, from the deployments she can’t face, from the version of herself that existed before loss. Covenant Reach sounds like exactly what she needs: a secluded Christian community deep in the backwater, six weeks of basic medical care, nothing complicated.
She arrives at dawn. The compound is beautiful — white-painted buildings, a chapel spire, a vegetable garden in careful rows. Elder Silas Broussard receives her with warm authority. The community brings her food and asks polite questions and seems genuinely glad she’s come.
And then the small things begin to accumulate.Women whose bodies hold themselves wrong. Faces performing the right emotion a beat too late. A teenage girl who mouths two words across the dining hall — help me — and then looks away. A note slipped under Claire’s cottage door: They took my baby. They’ll take yours too if you stay.
The woman Claire is called to treat hasn’t fallen. The compound’s one telephone is monitored. And the new community member who arrived days before she did — Elder Silas’s quiet, watchful nephew — is not a returning believer.
Wade Broussard is DEA undercover, embedded to break a drug trafficking network running supply boats beneath the compound’s missionary cover. He did not account for a real missionary nurse. He didn’t expect to feel responsible for her. And he certainly didn’t expect, when his extraction window finally opens, to realize he doesn’t want to leave without her.
As Claire maps the full scope of what’s happening beneath Covenant Reach’s surface — systematic abuse, women held captive by weaponized faith, children used as leverage — she and Wade have forty-eight hours to get a compound full of people to safety before his cover falls and the exits close for good.
Bayou Covenant is a novel about grief that becomes purpose, faith tested in the darkest rooms, and two people who find each other on the other side of what they thought they couldn’t survive. It is also a story about the difference between a shepherd who loves you and a fence with scripture on it.
Perfect for readers of Lynette Eason, Colleen Coble, and Dani Pettrey who love Christian romantic suspense with a propulsive plot, layered characters, and a faith thread that earns its resolution.
==Standalone story with a satisfying conclusion
==Book One of the Covenant Series
==Clean romantic suspense — no explicit content
==Faith-forward with nuanced, non-preachy spiritual themes
Transform your nights in just 90 days with a proven, pattern-breaking sleep tracker designed to rebuild your rest—one small habit at a time.
If you’re tired of waking up tired… you’re not alone. Most of us don’t need a “perfect” bedtime routine—we just need clarity. We need to SEE the habits, stressors, and rhythms that impact our sleep so we can finally change them.
Sleep Reset is a 3-month guided tracker that helps you do exactly that.
Inside, you’ll discover a simple, practical system that turns small daily choices into better nights. Track what matters, notice what’s draining your energy, and create sleep habits that actually stick.
WHAT’S INSIDE
✔ Daily Sleep Logs
Track bedtime, wake time, sleep quality, interruptions, stress levels, screens, caffeine, and more.
✔ Weekly Reviews & Mini-Resets
Identify patterns, adjust what’s not working, and set one focus habit each week.
✔ Monthly Overview Calendar
A high-level snapshot of your entire month—perfect for spotting cycles and triggers.
✔ Monthly Reflection Pages
Evaluate habits, improvements, challenges, and insights that shape your rest.
✔ Sleep Habit Builder Pages
Choose and track micro-habits that directly support better sleep.
✔ Clean, Gender-Neutral Design
Minimal, modern, and calming—designed for ease and clarity.
WHO THIS BOOK IS FOR
This tracker is perfect for:
• Busy people wanting better rest without overwhelm
• Overthinkers who need structure and clarity
• Anyone creating healthier nighttime habits
• Those trying to reduce stress, phone use, or irregular routines
• People who want a guided, realistic way to reset their sleep
WHY IT WORKS
Instead of guessing why you sleep poorly, this journal shows you:
✨ What improves your sleep
✨ What disrupts it
✨ What habits matter most
✨ What patterns repeat
✨ What small shifts create the biggest results
Better sleep doesn’t happen by accident—it happens by awareness, consistency, and micro-changes.
This book gives you all three.
Start your Sleep Reset today. Track what matters. Break the patterns. Build better nights.
Tame the chaos. Claim your calm. Design the life you actually want.
Feeling scattered, overwhelmed, or like your to-do list owns you? You’re not alone. Calm By Design: Chaos, Who? is your step-by-step guide to taking back control of your mind, emotions, and daily life—without gimmicks, without complicated systems, and definitely without guilt.
Inside, you’ll discover how to:
Declutter your mind and quiet mental noise
Organize your emotions so they stop running the show
Set boundaries that protect your peace without burning bridges
Build micro-habits that create lasting calm
Manage energy (not just time) for more focus and joy
Strategically rest, recharge, and reclaim your life
Packed with humor, real-life mini-stories, clever analogies, and actionable exercises, this book feels like a smart, funny friend guiding you through life’s messiness—one calm choice at a time.
Whether you’re a busy professional, student, new entrepreneur, or anyone craving mental clarity and emotional balance, Calm By Design gives you the tools to move from scattered and stressed to intentional, grounded, and thriving.
It’s time to stop surviving chaos and start designing calm—your life, your rules.
Priya Nathaniel has a perfect system for avoiding her former best friend.
What she doesn't have is a way to stop being hurt.
Then a hand-drawn map appears on her nightstand — a map of her own heart,
with blocked roads, dark rivers, and a valley she can't seem to reach. And
perched on her windowsill, eating a cracker and consulting a very small scroll,
is Pip: an angel-in-training on his first solo assignment.
Together they walk the landscape of everything Priya has been carrying —
the grudges she's been tending, the bitterness she accidentally drank, the
museum she built without realizing it, and the wall she hid behind because
being right felt safer than being free.
Slowly, Priya begins to understand that forgiveness isn't pretending it
didn't happen. It isn't saying it was okay. It's trusting that justice belongs
to Someone wiser than her own two hands — and that she is worth the choosing.
"Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as
in Christ God forgave you." — Ephesians 4:32
Perfect for: Independent readers ages 8–12 · Family read-alouds ·
Sunday school and church small groups · Homeschool co-ops · Anyone walking
through a hard season with someone they love
Includes: Full-color interior illustrations · Scripture verses ·
"Pip's Corner" discussion questions after every chapter · A Note to Grown-Ups ·
A reader activity page.
A faith-based romance about finding love when you've learned to expect loss—and discovering that peace isn't the absence of struggle, but the presence of Someone who never leaves.
She thought chronic pain meant a life alone. He thought one mistake meant he didn't deserve forgiveness. God had other plans.
Helena Young has spent three years managing severe chronic pain in isolation, building a careful life in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho where expectations are low and disappointment is survivable. When a compassionate nurse at her pain management clinic notices the worn research notebooks and the exhaustion she's trying to hide, something shifts—but Helena has learned the hard way that hope costs more than it's worth.
Forrest Sims carries guilt from a medical crisis three years ago that he can't seem to put down. Working at a low-acuity pain clinic, keeping everyone at arm's length, over-preparing for everything—that's safe. That's manageable. Until a patient with silver-blonde hair and radical honesty walks into his treatment room and he realizes some boundaries were made to be crossed.
When they both end up at the same chronic illness support group, their parallel struggles with faith, suffering, and grace begin to interweave. A shared scripture. Small kindnesses. Coffee shop conversations. The terrifying vulnerability of being seen at your worst—and being chosen anyway.
But learning to trust doesn't erase the wounds. When Helena's body betrays another good week with a devastating flare, and Forrest's old crisis replays itself at work, both must decide: do they protect themselves by pulling away, or do they risk everything by showing up imperfect?
Peace Beneath the Pines is an inspirational Christian romance that handles chronic illness, depression, and medical trauma with unflinching honesty and profound grace. For readers who want:
✓ Authentic disability and chronic pain representation
✓ Faith woven naturally into a contemporary love story
✓ Small-town Idaho setting with gorgeous lake and mountain scenery
✓ Slow-burn romance built on emotional intimacy
✓ Clean, closed-door content appropriate for all ages
✓ Characters who wrestle honestly with God and come out stronger
✓ A happily-ever-after that acknowledges suffering doesn't end but shows love persisting through it
Perfect for fans of Francine Rivers, Karen Kingsbury, and readers seeking Christian romance novels that honor both faith and lived experience with chronic illness.
Some love stories aren't about healing. They're about learning that being held is enough.
A suspended arson investigator. A pastor who won't stop telling the truth. Seven women who built the evidence that could bring down the most powerful man in the county — and died before anyone believed them.
Nora Callahan arrives in Granger's Hollow, Oregon, to close a fire file. She finds two accelerant origins where the official report shows one, a covered-up investigation, and a burned church full of things that were never meant to survive.
The fireproof box in the ruins contains eight months of meticulous documentation — photographs, signed statements, financial records, and a recording — compiled by a group of women who understood that feelings weren't evidence, and that evidence was the only thing that would hold. They were right. Someone made sure they didn't live to see it.
With her credentials suspended, the official channels compromised, and a man named Denton Harwick capable of reaching further than she'd anticipated, Nora has approximately no time and exactly one ally: Eli Greer, the former pastor of the burned church, who got two women out and has been living in the rubble of the rest ever since.
As Nora builds the case that Maren Costello started, she finds herself navigating something she's less practiced at than arson — the specific work of letting someone else carry part of the weight.
EYES LIKE EMBERS is a novel about what it takes to prove the truth, what it costs to carry grief alone, and what happens when two people who have both gotten very good at the performance of being fine find each other in a place where neither of them can manage it anymore.
The Anonymous Prayer Project is a tender, funny novel full of the kind of hope that costs something.
Perfect for book clubs, women's ministry groups, and anyone who has ever been brave enough to let someone pray for them.
Ellie Harper is the quiet engine of the Charleston Inter-Church Outreach Center — dependable, warm, and skilled at making herself invisible. When she designs the Anonymous Prayer Project, a twelve-week initiative pairing strangers from five local churches to pray for each other anonymously, she plans to coordinate it flawlessly from the background. She does not plan to participate.
Her director signs her up anyway.
Each Monday, a new theme arrives: Identity. Fear. Compassion. Their Heart. Forgiveness. And each week, Ellie discovers that the curriculum she wrote for everyone else has been waiting to find her. Her anonymous partner — careful, honest, and unexpectedly perceptive — writes back in ways that make her feel known in a way she'd stopped expecting.
She doesn't know it's Caleb.
Caleb Brooks, her quiet, steady coworker, figured out it was Ellie around Week Six. He kept writing anyway — because she needed it to stay anonymous a little longer, and he was willing to wait.
Set among the live oaks and salt-marsh warmth of Charleston, South Carolina, The Anonymous Prayer Project is a story about the prayers we send into the dark and what we find when the light comes on. It's about chronic illness and the courage it takes to receive care. It's about a mother who texts Bible verses followed immediately by photos of dogs in sombreros. It's about a guarded teenager who shows up because someone finally did for him. And it's about two people discovering that being fully known — by God, by a stranger, by someone who's been right there all along — is the thing they were most afraid of and most needed.
Home isn't a building. It's the people who show up—week after week, Tuesday after Tuesday.
For fifteen years, six women have gathered at their corner table in Cornerstone Community Church's fellowship hall. They've become more than friends. They've become family.
Sheila brings homemade rolls and nurtures everyone she meets.
June keeps everything organized and desperately needs control.
Ava quotes Scripture but secretly wonders if God is listening.
Susan knows everyone's business and calls it ministry.
Liza sketches every moment, bearing witness to what matters.
Wendy questions everything and keeps her exit strategy ready.
Then the announcement comes: Cornerstone is merging with a contemporary megachurch across town. The building will be sold. Services end in three months.
Suddenly, everything these women have built—their rhythms, their routines, their sacred corner table—is disappearing.
They make a pact to stay together. To keep meeting for Tuesday lunch no matter what. To prove that community can survive change.
But when the building is demolished and their circle fractures under the weight of grief, doubt, and fear, they each face their darkest moment:
• Sheila realizes her identity is built on being needed
• June discovers she can't control her way out of chaos
• Ava admits her faith might have been nostalgia all along
• Susan fears she's gossip, not love
• Liza feels invisible without her art mattering
• Wendy doesn't believe she belongs anywhere
Can the Tuesday table survive being rebuilt from broken pieces?
The Tuesday Table is a tender, honest story about six ordinary women navigating extraordinary loss. It's about the death of certainty and the resurrection of grace. About holding onto what matters when everything else is stripped away.
Themes: Church community • Women's friendship • Grief and healing • Faith in transition • Rebuilding after loss • Grace over structure • Intergenerational ministry "Sometimes the most sacred things are the ones we almost lose."
Luz de Vida: Un Compañero de Fe y Música es un viaje meditativo único a través del duelo, la sanidad y la presencia divina. Al combinar hermosas canciones cristianas originales con reflexiones devocionales y visuales de estilo cinematográfico, este recurso inmersivo invita al lector a hacer una pausa, respirar y encontrar lo sagrado en la vida cotidiana.
Ya sea que camines por el dolor, busques restauración o anheles una conexión espiritual, Luz de Vida ofrece un espacio para la adoración, la reflexión y la esperanza.
Dentro encontrarás:
Canciones originales como “Father Holy” y “Ain’t It Beautiful”
Meditaciones devocionales que profundizan la resonancia emocional y espiritual
Códigos QR que enlazan a música complementaria y listas de reproducción seleccionadas en Spotify
Narrativa visual y estímulos poéticos para inspiración creativa
Un formato flexible para devoción personal, reflexión en grupo o retiros artísticos
Curado y producido por Summer Trahan, este compañero espiritual está diseñado para encontrarte tanto en la oscuridad como en la luz—ofreciendo consuelo, claridad y un renovado sentido de la presencia divina.
Christmas Giggles: A Holiday Joke & Activity Book
Get ready to jingle all the way to belly laughs! Christmas Giggles is packed with original jokes, silly riddles, and festive funnies that sleigh — from snowmen with punchlines to elves who love wordplay. Designed for kids ages 6–9, this holiday edition blends laugh-out-loud humor with interactive activities like word searches, joke match-ups, and doodle prompts.
Whether you’re cozying up by the fire or wrapping gifts with giggles, this book brings seasonal cheer to classrooms, stockings, and snow days alike. It’s the perfect gift for young readers who love to laugh — and grown-ups who love to hear it.
Let the giggles snow!
Second Grade Giggles: Jokes for 7–8 Year Olds
Get ready for laugh‑out‑loud fun! Packed with original jokes, silly riddles, and knock‑knock punchlines, this book is perfect for second graders who love to giggle, share, and perform.
Inside you’ll discover:
🐶 Animal Antics — furry, feathered, and funny
✏️ School Shenanigans — classroom comedy at its best
🍕 Food Funnies — tasty jokes with extra cheese
🚪 Knock‑Knock Corner — classic laughs with a twist
🔬 Silly Science — experiments in giggles
🎉 Giggle Grab Bag — a surprise mix of random silliness
✍️ Interactive Pages — write, draw, and create your own jokes
Perfect for:
Road trips, classrooms, and rainy days
Building reading confidence through humor
Kids who love to tell jokes to friends and family
Warning: May cause unstoppable laughter and repeat performances!
Give your child the gift of humor and creativity with Second Grade Giggles. It’s more than a joke book — it’s a laughter adventure!
He Gives His Beloved Rest
Step away from the noise and into the quiet presence of God.
He Gives His Beloved Rest is a Christian adult coloring book designed to soothe the soul, calm the mind, and awaken the spirit. The pages feature scripture-inspired line art with open, outline-style lettering — perfect for coloring while meditating on God’s promises of peace, renewal, and rest.
Whether you're seeking healing, reflection, or a creative way to connect with your faith, this book offers a gentle invitation to be still and know that you are held.
Inside you'll find:
38 beautifully illustrated coloring pages
Scripture verses centered on rest, trust & spiritual renewal
Open-style lettering for easy coloring and contemplation
Intricate line art designed to inspire peace and creativity
Single-sided pages to prevent bleed-through
Perfect for quiet mornings, Sabbath afternoons, or gifting to a friend in need of grace.
Let your hands create what your heart longs to remember: You are beloved. You are held. You are invited to rest.
Jack never expected to discover a place where his deepest fears, quietest hopes and unanswered questions lived—until he stepped into the Library of Unfinished Prayers.
Guided by a wise, soft-spoken Librarian, Jack is led through a series of hidden chambers—each one revealing a piece of his heart he didn’t know how to put into words. From storm-swept cliffs to silent rooms, from shadowed hallways to sunlit gardens, every chamber becomes a doorway into the prayers Jack never finished…and the ones he never knew he prayed.
But the greatest discovery waits at the end of the journey: the truth that God was never far, never silent and never absent. He had been with Jack through every question, every fear, every whisper of a prayer that never quite formed.
A quiet, imaginative, spiritually rich story, The Library of Unfinished Prayers helps readers of all ages recognize the nearness of God—not just in miracles or dramatic moments, but in the ordinary, the quiet and the deeply personal spaces of the heart.
Perfect for children, teens and families seeking a gentle story filled with comfort, hope and the assurance of God’s presence.
If you’ve ever wondered whether God hears you—even the prayers you can’t speak—this book is for you. Spoiler--He does!
Light of Life: A Faith & Music Companion is a one-of-a-kind meditative journey through grief, healing and divine presence. Blending beautiful original Christian songs with devotional reflections and cinematic visuals, this immersive resource invites readers to pause, breathe and encounter the sacred in everyday life.
Whether you're walking through sorrow, seeking restoration or longing for spiritual connection, Light of Life offers a space for worship, reflection and hope.
Inside you'll find:
Original songs such as "Father Holy" and "Ain’t It Beautiful"
Devotional meditations that deepen emotional and spiritual resonance
QR codes linking to companion music and curated playlists in Spotify
Visual storytelling and poetic prompts for creative inspiration
A flexible format for personal devotion, group reflection or artistic retreat
Curated and produced by Summer Trahan, this companion is designed to meet you in both darkness and light—offering comfort, clarity and a renewed sense of divine presence.
Some confessions don't always belong in a church. They belong across the street, with a good espresso and someone who knows how to listen.
Maggie Calloway makes excellent coffee and keeps her boundaries clear. She co-owns Common Grounds, the warmest coffee shop on Grover Street, and she's built a life that's deliberately simple: good beans, loyal regulars and a Sunday that belongs only to her. What she doesn't do is religion. Not anymore.
But when people from Grace Community Church—the cheerful brick building across the street—start sitting at her counter with things they can't say anywhere else, Maggie finds herself doing something she never planned: listening. Really listening. And somehow, without credentials or theology or any intention whatsoever, she becomes the person people come to when the church feels too formal and their grief feels too heavy.
Enter Pastor Eli Ward.
He's earnest, self-aware and unexpectedly charming. He makes a perfect cortado at home and has very specific opinions about grind size. When he walks into Common Grounds to understand why his congregation is confessing to the barista instead of him, he doesn't come with territory to protect—he comes with genuine curiosity. And a legal pad he never actually uses.
What begins as an unlikely partnership becomes something neither of them planned for: a slow-burn collaboration that blurs the line between ministry and friendship, between faith and the space just outside it. Because grace, it turns out, doesn't check the address before it shows up. And sometimes the most sacred work happens over coffee, in a room that smells like cardamom and second chances.
A cozy romance about ministry without credentials, love without pretense, and the surprising places grace shows up when you stop looking for it in all the traditional spots.
Held in Heaven: A Devotional for Grieving Pet Owners
When a beloved pet crosses the rainbow bridge, the ache is real — and so is the love that remains.
Held in Heaven is a gentle devotional designed to comfort those mourning the loss of a cherished animal companion. Through poetic reflections, scripture-based meditations, breath prayers, and over 30 pages of art-only coloring prompts, this book offers sacred space to remember, feel, and heal.
Whether you're sitting in silence, searching for signs of hope, or longing for reunion, each page reminds you: You are not alone. Your pet was deeply loved. And the love never ends.
Inside you'll find:
Poetic introduction and themed devotionals
Breath prayers and reflection prompts
Daily comfort card pages for quiet reflection
30+ art-only coloring spreads for visual healing
Original songs with QR codes to listen and reflect
Final blessing and Songs of Comfort appendix
Perfect for gifting or personal healing, Held in Heaven is a tender companion for anyone navigating pet loss with faith, creativity, and grace.
The Gentle Light: A Guided Journal for Rest, Reflection & Grace
Step into a sanctuary of stillness, healing and renewal.
The Gentle Light is a five-part guided journal that walks beside you through quiet seasons and sacred transitions. With poetic reflections, scripture-based prompts, and closing benedictions, each section—Stillness, Healing, Hope, Presence and Renewal—offers a gentle rhythm of grace for the soul.
Whether you're seeking rest, rebuilding after loss, or simply longing for spiritual companionship, this journal invites you to pause, reflect and receive. Each entry is a soft breath of truth, designed to meet you where you are and remind you: you are not alone. You are held in light.
Perfect for morning devotionals, evening reflection, or quiet moments in between, The Gentle Light is more than a journal—it’s a companion.
*This edition is formatted in large print for easier reading — ideal for older adults, visually impaired readers or anyone seeking a gentle, spacious layout.
When the ache won’t let go, when silence stretches longer than you imagined, when the path disappears beneath your feet — there is still a way through.
The Way Through is a gentle, faith-rooted companion for those walking through grief, uncertainty, and spiritual transformation. Structured around five sacred movements — The Ache, The Silence, The Thread, The Light and Becoming — each section offers:
A scripture meditation to anchor the soul
A soul-stirring essay to companion the heart
A poetic reflection to name what’s tender
A journaling prompt (Pause + Consider) to invite response
A benediction to bless the way forward
Printed on premium color paper, this edition features luminous full-page illustrations that echo the emotional arc of each chapter — from shadow to sunrise, ache to becoming. With lyrical depth and quiet courage, The Way Through invites readers to trust the grace that meets them in every season.
You are not alone. You are walking with Him.
Find rest in the quiet rhythm of grace.
This beautifully designed journal offers a gentle space for reflection, prayer, and spiritual renewal. With 120 lined pages and a short Bible verse on every right-hand page, Notes of Grace invites you to slow down, breathe deeply, and reconnect with God’s presence.
Whether you're journaling through seasons of change, seeking peace in your daily walk, or simply longing for a sacred pause, this scripture-filled companion provides encouragement in every margin. Each verse is carefully chosen to uplift, comfort, and inspire — guiding your thoughts with truth and tenderness.
Perfect for personal devotion, gifting, or quiet moments of soul care, Notes of Grace is more than a journal. It’s a sanctuary in pages.
Features:
6" × 9" trim size
120 lined pages for writing, prayer, and reflection
Scripture verse on every right-hand page
Soft matte cover (or hardcover option)
Ideal for daily journaling, quiet time, or spiritual renewal
Write freely. Reflect deeply. Rest in grace.
The Sound of Surrender: A Devotional Songbook for Healing
Step into a devotional journey where words, music, and prayer intertwine. The Sound of Surrender is more than a book — it’s a healing experience. Each chapter pairs a heartfelt reflection with an original song and a guided prayer, inviting you to lay down your burdens and encounter peace.
Through themes of grief, betrayal, fear, shame, forgiveness, hope, peace, surrender and blessing, this book gently leads you from brokenness into wholeness. QR codes connect you directly to original songs and instrumental soundscapes, creating a multi-sensory path of worship and rest.
Whether you are journaling, praying, or simply listening, The Sound of Surrender offers space to breathe, reflect and be renewed. With symbolic sketches, interactive pages and music woven throughout, this devotional is designed to comfort the weary and inspire the hopeful.
Perfect for:
Personal devotion and journaling
Small group reflection
Times of grief, transition, or renewal
Anyone longing for a deeper encounter with God’s presence
Come with open hands. Leave with a heart at rest.
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