Home :: Books :: Audiocassettes  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes

Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Texas Angel: A Powerful Story of Uncommon Courage

Texas Angel: A Powerful Story of Uncommon Courage

List Price: $17.99
Your Price: $17.99
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Texas Angel
Review: Although I thought the book started out slow and continued that way until about half way, I'm glad I stuck with it. By the middle of the book, the plot picked up and I became entralled with the characters. While I liked each character in their own ways, I could have wrung Benjamin's neck. He was probably the most frustating factor in the entire book, which after a while adds depth to the story.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Best Romance nover for young Readers around
Review: Hello.Texas Angel is the best Book Ever! The novel is full of Love,Suspense,and Action.It keeps you at the edge of your seat.Me and my Best friend couldn't put the book down.We had the whole book finshed in one day.We aboustly loved it and very anxious to read the second one (Heavens road).We also strongly suggest that the network makes a movie of Texas Angel. But stick to the book no adding or subtraction from the story.Also make it a strict PG13 movie.We thank Judith Pelle for this nover an hope for a third addition to it.Thanks Sandra and Kelsey.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Finally! A Christian romance with meaning!
Review: I first borrowed "Texas Angel" from the library because the cover was interesting and the back sounded good. Since overall most "Christian romances" have very little Christ and are simply "clean," I wasn't expecting anything very deep. Obviously I'd never before read Judith Pella.

The book views the world through two pairs of eyes: that of a holier-than-thou pastor and a terrified woman sold into slavery and prostitution. My pride told me to put it down, that there couldn't be any good from a book that used a prostitute as its heroine... how dare the author even use such a wretched creature!... but I stuck it out and was glad that I did. I learned a lot about human nature from this book. There's a difference between using something for shock factor and showing truth by it. In the end, the woman was redeemed to Christ, and the pastor, after his desperate fall from his high horse, slowly came back to God through her... a woman he wouldn't even look at six months before.

So for those of you, like me, who are repulsed by stories that involve "less-than-holy" heroines, this book may be your turning point. God really used it to open my eyes and show me my own flaws. I hated Benjamin at first, with his high and mighty preaching, but by the end I was genuinely in love with the character. The fall off his high horse was handled well and was utterly painful even for the reader... the book manages to convey so many emotions and lessons in a beautifully wrapped package. It was a very, very good read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Finally! A Christian romance with meaning!
Review: I first borrowed "Texas Angel" from the library because the cover was interesting and the back sounded good. Since overall most "Christian romances" have very little Christ and are simply "clean," I wasn't expecting anything very deep. Obviously I'd never before read Judith Pella.

The book views the world through two pairs of eyes: that of a holier-than-thou pastor and a terrified woman sold into slavery and prostitution. My pride told me to put it down, that there couldn't be any good from a book that used a prostitute as its heroine... how dare the author even use such a wretched creature!... but I stuck it out and was glad that I did. I learned a lot about human nature from this book. There's a difference between using something for shock factor and showing truth by it. In the end, the woman was redeemed to Christ, and the pastor, after his desperate fall from his high horse, slowly came back to God through her... a woman he wouldn't even look at six months before.

So for those of you, like me, who are repulsed by stories that involve "less-than-holy" heroines, this book may be your turning point. God really used it to open my eyes and show me my own flaws. I hated Benjamin at first, with his high and mighty preaching, but by the end I was genuinely in love with the character. The fall off his high horse was handled well and was utterly painful even for the reader... the book manages to convey so many emotions and lessons in a beautifully wrapped package. It was a very, very good read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Best Romance nover for young Readers around
Review: I would like to ask the writer of the publisher's synopsis one question: Who the heck is Angela? There is no such person in the book, the main character's name is Elise. I assumed that maybe she changes her name somewhere in the story, but that's not the case.

The story follows the pattern of the "Lone Star" trilogy, wherein the main character in the first book is a woman forced into a very abusive situation, and is eventually rescued by an unlikely source (only this time it's a self-righteous minister, and not a band of outlaws). I really wanted to smack that minister, as well as the members of Elise's former family that denied her when her mother's former owner came to claim her. There are a couple of characters in the book who appear to be undesireables on the surface, but are actually good men (i.e., the Sinclairs' guide on the trail, and the minister's "mountain man" brother). Not to spoil the surprise, but if you read the sequel, "Heaven's Road," you learn what happened to the oldest son after he ran away from home and get re-introduced to the Sinclairs' trail guide.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Very good, like most Judith Pella stories.
Review: I would like to ask the writer of the publisher's synopsis one question: Who the heck is Angela? There is no such person in the book, the main character's name is Elise. I assumed that maybe she changes her name somewhere in the story, but that's not the case.

The story follows the pattern of the "Lone Star" trilogy, wherein the main character in the first book is a woman forced into a very abusive situation, and is eventually rescued by an unlikely source (only this time it's a self-righteous minister, and not a band of outlaws). I really wanted to smack that minister, as well as the members of Elise's former family that denied her when her mother's former owner came to claim her. There are a couple of characters in the book who appear to be undesireables on the surface, but are actually good men (i.e., the Sinclairs' guide on the trail, and the minister's "mountain man" brother). Not to spoil the surprise, but if you read the sequel, "Heaven's Road," you learn what happened to the oldest son after he ran away from home and get re-introduced to the Sinclairs' trail guide.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A must read!
Review: Judith Pella has crafted a master piece with this spectacular novel! Elise, thrown from a life of comfort and wealth to the lowly position of a slave when a condeming secret is revealed this young woman is forced to sell her self to save the life of her child. Benjamin Sinclair, a self-righteous and condeming preacher who feels called to ministry in Texas immediately deems her lower than the low. Watch as God works and preforms miracles in each of these peoples' hearts to bring them to a point of submission before Him so that His perfect plan can be manifested in their lives.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Eagerly awaiting the sequel!
Review: Judith Pella is quite a writer! This isn't the first time she's used characters that a reader would consider "lowest of the low" (in this one it's a slave forced into prostitution, and an oh-so-egotistical preacher I just wanted to slap), managing to change them almost entirely by the story's end. These "total turnarounds" her characters experience could come off as very contrived if done by a writer with less skill, but I've never found myself frustrated with Pella for trying to manipulate me--she does it so well that I'm into the story and forget it's "just some words on paper." Her latest is characteristically vivid, and I really enjoyed it--although I must put a "caution" and say that while Pella never stoops to the dirtiness of secular romance, she does go beyond the Janette Oke level. The worlds in her books are *not* all "peaches 'n' cream." Still, quite a good saga that had only a few drawn-out moments (I got a bit tired of the wavering emotions of both Benjamin and Elise in regard to each other). I will definitely read the sequel!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Eagerly awaiting the sequel!
Review: Judith Pella is quite a writer! This isn't the first time she's used characters that a reader would consider "lowest of the low" (in this one it's a slave forced into prostitution, and an oh-so-egotistical preacher I just wanted to slap), managing to change them almost entirely by the story's end. These "total turnarounds" her characters experience could come off as very contrived if done by a writer with less skill, but I've never found myself frustrated with Pella for trying to manipulate me--she does it so well that I'm into the story and forget it's "just some words on paper." Her latest is characteristically vivid, and I really enjoyed it--although I must put a "caution" and say that while Pella never stoops to the dirtiness of secular romance, she does go beyond the Janette Oke level. The worlds in her books are *not* all "peaches 'n' cream." Still, quite a good saga that had only a few drawn-out moments (I got a bit tired of the wavering emotions of both Benjamin and Elise in regard to each other). I will definitely read the sequel!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Eagerly awaiting the sequel!
Review: Judith Pella is quite a writer! This isn't the first time she's used characters that a reader would consider "lowest of the low" (in this one it's a slave forced into prostitution, and an oh-so-egotistical preacher I just wanted to slap), managing to change them almost entirely by the story's end. These "total turnarounds" her characters experience could come off as very contrived if done by a writer with less skill, but I've never found myself frustrated with Pella for trying to manipulate me--she does it so well that I'm into the story and forget it's "just some words on paper." Her latest is characteristically vivid, and I really enjoyed it--although I must put a "caution" and say that while Pella never stoops to the dirtiness of secular romance, she does go beyond the Janette Oke level. The worlds in her books are *not* all "peaches 'n' cream." Still, quite a good saga that had only a few drawn-out moments (I got a bit tired of the wavering emotions of both Benjamin and Elise in regard to each other). I will definitely read the sequel!


<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates