Pharaoh’s Daughter – Saves Baby Mehy from the Nile

Deb’s Dozen: Pharaoh’s Daughter finds a baby in the Nile and saves his life.

Anippe is the daughter of Pharaoh but has been given to his honored general, Horemheb, and his wife after Pharaoh’s wife dies in childbirth. Much loved by her new abbi and ummi, Anippe grows in beauty and grace. When Pharaoh dies and his kingdom is inherited by his son, King Tut, Horemheb decides Anippe should marry and gives her to his best captain, Sebak.

Anippe is terrified—terrified not of the gentle giant, Sebak, but that she will get pregnant. She watched her mother die in childbirth and does not want the same fate to come to her. Deceiving Sebak, she uses herbs to prevent pregnancy, although Sebak would love a son.

Disaster strikes. King Tut’s wife loses child after child in miscarriage and Tut is convinced by his other advisor, the dastardly Ay, that the reason is an imbalance in ma’at because the Hebrews have grown so numerous. Tut decrees that all newborn Hebrew boys be killed at birth. Grief-stricken at the edict, the Hebrew midwives refuse to fulfill King Tut’s decree.

Sebak knows that one of Anippe’s Hebrew friend’s wife is pregnant and thinks Anippe herself might be pregnant. He orders the Ramessid guards to fulfill the decree in the unskilled workers area only—to leave the craftsmen’s village alone to save Mered and Puah’s child. Then Sebak is sent off to war with the Hittites, still thinking Anippe pregnant, and Anippe is left as the Amira of Avaris. With Sebak gone, his edict about the craftsmen’s village will probably be disregarded.

Mered and Puah’s next door neighbors, Amram and Jochebed had a son soon after the decree of King Tut was given. They have managed to hide him so far, but now fear he will be discovered. They decide to build a baby ark, a reed basket made waterproof with tar and pitch and float him in the Nile—hopefully, to drift downriver and be rescued. He is rescued, but not in a far off land. The basket has floated into the bathhouse of Anippe who has discovered she is not with child. Deciding to keep this child, whose skin color is close to hers, she begins to weave an elaborate deception with the aid of her sister, Ankhe, and Miriam, the baby’s sister.

Mesu Andrews has taken the story of Moses and Pharaoh’s Daughter and fleshed it out with historically-drawn details—supposing what might have been and how the rescue and subsequent upbringing may have occurred. You will fall in love with the characters, thrill with the dangers, and admire the Hebrews who lived daily in fear of their lives yet continued to honor El Shaddai—the true God. Come journey with Anippe and Mered and Miriam and Mehy on their adventure. Four stars. The Pharaoh’s Daughter: A Treasures of the Nile Novel.

In my interview with her recently, Mesu told me her passion is to find women in the Old Testament that God felt important enough to mention.Whether He mentions them by name or not, she wanted to give them a story. In other books, she has written of Gomer and Dinah to name two.

I asked her to tell me more about Mesu and her writing. She says she is an “old fogie” and wants people to take personal responsibility for their choices—that when they do, God honors it. Therefore, she lets her characters reap the consequences of their decisions. In Pharaoh’s Daughter, Anippe makes the choice to overcome. This responsibility is very real to Mesu. Suffering from a chronic illness since 1997, she realized that staying in bed was not productive so she chose to persevere, live with the pain, and write.

Mesu AndrewsMesu grew up in the “middle of corn fields” in Indiana and met her husband in third grade. They now have two grown daughters and six grandkids. She was a speaker until she was bedridden for six months and so turned to writing. They now live in Washington State where her husband is Dean at Multnomah Biblical Seminary.

Asked what her readers might not know about her, she laughed and said she was bucked off a horse when she was six years old, but still enjoys an occasional horse ride. She persevered through difficulty and pain even at that early age!

Next in her writing schedule is the story of Miriam, Moses’ sister—a glimpse into the life and struggle of God’s first prophetess, a woman called to trust Him though she doesn’t understand Him. I look forward to reading that book too! I so came to love Miriam in Pharaoh’s Daughter.

To learn more about Mesu Andrews and her books, check out her website, www.mesuandrews.com

Waterbrook Press gave me a copy of Pharaoh’s Daughter in exchange for my candid review.

Life After Breath – When Widows Can’t Remember to Breathe

Deb’s Dozen: Keep breathing and learn how you can help other widows breathe too.

Susan VandePol has written a gem of a book in Life After Breath. In its pages, she has bared her soul to help you who now follow her path. You women who loved, and still love, husbands who have died—you whom the world now calls widow. Susan writes from her heart and her great love for her Lord and Savior. She endeavors to give hope to you who now feel at your most hopeless. She provides sustenance to you who may have forgotten to eat in your grief.

Susan talks to the inner depths of you who are swallowed up in grief at your losses. She tells you with certainty that you are not alone—He has promised never to leave you or forsake you. He has experienced great loss and great grief. He will bear your burdens and lift them up if you will but let Him do so. We all should remember those verses from the 23rd Psalm, “… Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for You are with me …”

Susan writes, “As a widow, you have been called for a great and unique purpose. Because of what you have suffered, you know that His grace is sufficient and His power is perfected and strong in you weakness and limitations. The power of Christ rests on you, dwells in you, and steadies you. He is your hope, and He will not disappoint you.” You do not grieve without hope.

Through deft use of word definitions and Scripture, Susan leads you through the grieving process—from the first days when you felt you could not breathe—to the days when sorrow has loosed its hold on you and you can again breathe deeply. She has walked the path and has come out stronger on the other side. Through story and personal example, she will teach you that you too can do the same.

I am not a widow—and I can’t bear the thought of the day when I might become one. But Susan’s book spoke to me anyway. You see, I lost my mom a few years ago and there was the tearing and grief in my spirit about which Susan writes so eloquently. My mom lived with us for the last few years of her life and we grew ever so close. In some ways, we’d traded places—I now cared for her as she once cared for me. I had regrets, but Susan taught me “if you are carrying the burden of regret, the cure comes with its abandonment.” And also I was to “honor the one you have lost in godly grief, not in regret, because godly sorrow leads to repentance and produces life.” I realize that I had never truly given Mother to God—she was truly His all along, but I didn’t want to give her back. And truly, I can now see that she is in a much better place, whole and healthy and happy beyond measure. And I can rejoice in her happiness and truly find joy in remembering who she was and all she gave to me.

Life after Breath is indeed just that—a way to come through the darkness into the light and breathe again. If you are a widow, Susan’s book will be a God-send to help you navigate the dark waters of your grief and arrive safely at the shore. If you are grieving for any reason, Susan’s book, though written specifically for widows, will help you understand and heal from the wounds life has given you. I recommend this book highly—five stars. Life After Breath: After Her Husband Takes His Last Breath, and After She Tries to Catch Hers.(Morgan James Faith)

When I spoke with Susan earlier this year I asked her why she wrote the book–why this topic. She said that the topic chose her. She thought she’d be writing about a teaching God had given her years ago about women and the art of speaking wickedness to ourselves, not others. This had been her favorite topic to teach. She didn’t want to do this topic. She didn’t want to self-publish. However, God had other plans–she feels it’s quite the miracle how it happened.

She says she’s learned so much about herself in the process. She’s learned she had something to say that could help hurting widows. She learned that she, as a widow, had a calling to help other widows discover their callings. She learned she could come alongside those in pain from losing their husbands and help them work through their feelings. In fact, she’s having her first retreat for widows this fall.

She comes from a mixed family: her dad was a Russian Jew and her mom an Irish Catholic. Her family was quite dysfunctional. Her mom was an alcoholic and her one brother has “no need for God, but he will.” Susan was saved at a little Christian coffee house called “Jonah’s Place” in the ’70s revival in California. Her parents divorced. She married Bob Ortega in 1981. One month after her daughter, Jennifer, was born, her mother committed suicide on Halloween. The rest of her story is in Life After Breath.

Susan loves sports, reading, horses, bike rides with her husband, gardening, birds, fireflies, and creative house spending. She’s a social introvert although you wouldn’t know it to talk to her. Her favorite books of all time are C.S. Lewis’ Space Trilogy, A Severe Mercy by Sheldon Vanauken, and all the Dick Francis mysteries. My kind of gal!

Her formal bio states that Susan VandePol is known for the Families of the Fallen protocol Susan VandePolfor fire departments and its partner protocol, Life After Breath, for churches. “The protocol is now being used across the country and endorsed by experts in the fields of grief, crisis, trauma, suicide prevention, CIR, PTSD, and CISM. Susan is certified in grief, crisis, and trauma counseling; grief coaching; master life coaching; individual crisis intervention; victim response; amd basic and family mediation.” She is a frequent speaker at women’s retreats and conferences as well as various firefighter and church events. She homeschooled Jennifer, Samuel, and Benjamin and now lives in Michigan with her second husband, of whom she says she “shamelessly manipulated into falling in love with her.” To learn more about Susan and the Life After Breath protocol, go to www.mattersoflifeandbreath.com or www.familiesofthefallen.com. You can follow her on Facebook or e-mail her at lifeafterbreath@hotmail.com.

Morgan James Publishing gave me a copy of Life After Breath in exchange for my candid review.

Irish Meadows Where Irish Eyes Are Smiling

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Deb’s Dozen: Two beautiful daughters, two unlikely beaus, a stubborn father—will love prevail?

Irish Meadows is a beautiful Long Island horse farm James O’Leary has spent his lifetime building. But now racing and betting are to be banned leaving the farm in dire financial straits. Not to worry, James thinks—after all, he has two beautiful daughters he can marry off into wealthy families. However, James has figured on his daughters’ having other ideas!

Brianna, the second daughter, has always pined for her father’s approval, but never seems to make him proud. She is jealous of her sister, Colleen, who seems to be the apple of her father’s eye. Brianna has always loved Gilbert Whelan and is joyfully anticipating his return to Irish Meadows.

Gil is amazed when he sees Brianna—she has grown up into a beautiful young woman while he’s been away at college. Gil knows, though, that even though he may care for Brianna, James will never allow her to marry a poor man. Raised in the O’Leary household since his mother died, Gil feels a huge burden of debt to James O’Leary. Will he sacrifice all he hold dear to pay that debt?

Colleen, the older sister, has always pined for her mother’s approval, but never seems to make her proud. She is jealous of her sister, Brianna, who seems to be her mother’s favorite. Colleen, stunningly beautiful, has the reputation of being a flirt and dresses to suit the bill. She decides to set her cap for Gil—mainly to upset her sister. Selfish and spoiled, she is horrified at the punishment her father gives her when one of her many schemes runs awry.

Susan Anne Mason has written a wonderfully complex story in Irish Meadows. She brings to life each of the characters and makes us care for them. You can almost see Irish Meadows: the beautiful home, the efficient stables. As Irish Meadows draws closer to financial ruin, the two girls will need all their strength to withstand their father’s wishes and follow their dreams. You’ll love Brianna from the beginning along with the handsome Gil. The other characters take more time to draw you in, but drawn in you will be. I truly didn’t want the story to end, but I hear rumors there may be a sequel! Five stars. Irish Meadows (Courage to Dream Book #1).

Irish Meadows is Susan’s first historical novel and won the Fiction from the Heartland contest sponsored by the Mid-American Romance Authors chapter of the Romance Writers of America. She calls her writing style, “romance sprinkled with faith.” Susan, her husband, two children, and two cats live outside Toronto, Ontario, Canada. To learn more about Susan, check out her website: www.SusanAnneMason.com.

Bethany House via the Litfuse Publicity Group gave me a copy of Irish Meadows in exchange for my candid review.