Eli
Stock No: WW18045
Eli   -     By: Bill Myers

Eli

Zondervan / 2000 / Paperback

In Stock
Stock No: WW18045

Buy Item Our Price$13.70 Retail: $14.99 Save 9% ($1.29)
In Stock
Quantity:
Stock No: WW18045
Zondervan / 2000 / Paperback
Quantity:

Add To Cart

or checkout with

Add To Wishlist
eBook Our Price$2.99 View Details
Quantity:


Add To Cart

or checkout with

Wishlist

Product Close-up | Editorial Reviews
This product is not available for expedited shipping.
* This product is available for shipment only to the USA.
Others Also Purchased (15)
Select this Item Product Title/Author Availability Price Quantity
$7.49
In Stock
Our Price$7.49
Retail: $9.99
Add To Cart
$7.49
$4.99
In Stock
Our Price$4.99
Retail: $6.99
Add To Cart
$4.99
$7.49
In Stock
Our Price$7.49
Retail: $9.99
Add To Cart
$7.49
$6.29
In Stock
Our Price$6.29
Retail: $6.99
Add To Cart
$6.29
$7.49
In Stock
Our Price$7.49
Retail: $9.99
Add To Cart
$7.49
$28.99
In Stock
Our Price$28.99
Retail: $39.97
Add To Cart
$28.99
$9.99
In Stock
Our Price$9.99
Retail: $12.99
Add To Cart
$9.99
$19.74
In Stock
Our Price$19.74
Retail: $22.95
Add To Cart
$19.74
$47.99
In Stock
Our Price$47.99
Retail: $63.96
Add To Cart
$47.99
$19.74
In Stock
Our Price$19.74
Retail: $22.95
Add To Cart
$19.74
$4.99
In Stock
Our Price$4.99
Retail: $6.99
Add To Cart
$4.99
$50.99
In Stock
Our Price$50.99
Retail: $69.96
Add To Cart
$50.99
$7.99
In Stock
Our Price$7.99
Retail: $9.99
Add To Cart
$7.99

Product Description

What would our world be like without Jesus? A hardened newscaster finds out when he's hurled into a parallel universe like our own, except for one thing: Christ hasn't yet appeared. Then he meets a humble man clad in jeans and a T-shirt who preaches about love and works miracles. Is he the Son of God? 304 pages, softcover from Zondervan.

Product Information

Title: Eli
By: Bill Myers
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 304
Vendor: Zondervan
Publication Date: 2000
Dimensions: 8.50 X 5.50 (inches)
Weight: 1 pound 1 ounce
ISBN: 0310218039
ISBN-13: 9780310218036
Stock No: WW18045

Publisher's Description

What If Jesus Had Not Come Until Today? Who Would Follow Him? Who Would Kill Him? A fiery car crash hurls TV journalist Conrad Davis into another world exactly like ours except for one detail—Jesus Christ did not come 2,000 years ago, but today. Starting with angels heralding a birth in the back of a motel laundry room, the skeptical Davis watches the gospel unfold in today’s society as a Messiah in T-shirt and blue jeans heals, raises people from the dead, and speaks such startling truths that he captures the heart of a nation. But the young man’s actions and his criticism of the religious establishment earn him enemies as ruthless as they are powerful. An intense and thought-provoking novel, Eli strips away religious tradition to present Jesus fresh and unvarnished. With gripping immediacy, Bill Myers weaves a story whose truth will refresh your faith.

Author Bio

Bill Myers (www.Billmyers.com) is a bestselling author and award-winning writer/director whose work has won sixty national and international awards. His books and videos have sold eight million copies and include The Seeing, Eli, The Voice, My Life as, Forbidden Doors, and McGee and Me.

Library Journal

In a last-ditch attempt to convince his TV producers to run a story on alternate realities, Davis Conrad decides to film the professor who convinced him that such realities exist. Along the way, after a strange accident he can't remember, Davis finds himself fleeing police by hopping into a VW van straight out of the 1960s. The group he's with, dressed in tie-dye and peace symbols, head for a motel laundry room, where they've heard that a miracle will occur. As he lays eyes on an unnamed baby boy, Davis flashes back to a sterile white room, where he seems to be hooked up to machinery. Then, he realizes two things: he's actually popping in and out of an alternate reality where people will think he's crazy if he says anything, and all of the Bibles he can find don't include the New Testament. And the child in the alternate reality? His name is Eli, and he is just starting to prove to one and all that he is the Son of God. Myers (Blood of Heaven) seems to start out in circles but sets up a thought-provoking plot revolving around a simple question: What if Jesus came now for the first time? With this thrilling and ominous tale, Myers continues to shine brightly in speculative fiction based on biblical truths. Highly recommended. Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

Publisher's Weekly

Saunders's (Pastoralia) idiosyncratic voice makes an almost perfect accompaniment to children's book illustrator Smith's (The Stinky Cheese Man) heightened characterizations and slightly surreal backdrops in this unconventional fairy tale for grownups. Saunders describes the setting, the town of Frip, as "three leaning shacks by the sea," which Smith represents as oblong two-story towers in brick red, ocean blue and mint green situated on irregular plots of land with sinewy trees against a yellow sky that suggest a Daliesque eerieness. The 1,500 gappers, spiky little creatures with multiple eyes, feed on the goats that graze the shacks' backyards; by habit, they split into three groups to attack all three properties at once. One day, the gappers decide that henceforth they will concentrate all their efforts on the goats at only one house, the one closest to the sea--inhabited by a girl, Capable, and her grieving, widowed father. Soon, the two unafflicted families begin to tell themselves that they are superior to Capable and her father ("Not that we're saying we're better than you, necessarily, it's just that, since gappers are bad, and since you and you alone now have them, it only stands to reason that you are not, perhaps, quite as good as us"). Of course it's only a matter of time until everybody's luck changes. The Saunders-Smith collaboration is inspired. Smith adds witty touches throughout, and Saunders's dialogue features uncannily amusing deadpan repetitions and platitudinous self-exculpations. Saunders is much too hip to bring this fable to an edifying ending, but things do conclude as happily as is possible in the morally challenged, circumscribed world of Frip. 100,000 first printing; major ad/promo; author tour. (Aug.) ELI: A NOVEL Bill Myers. Zondervan, $12.99 paper (304p) ISBN 0-310-218039 ~ In this compelling if at times frustrating novel, Myers imagines a parallel universe in which Jesus Christ is born not 2,000 years ago in Bethlehem but 30 years ago in Santa Monica, Calif. Through Conrad Davis, a universe-hopping journalist, we meet the 20th-century Jesus, whose name is Eli Shepherd. In less capable hands, science fiction about a contemporary messiah might become a morass of polemic and pulp, but Myers weaves a deft, affecting tale that preserves the enigmatically audacious Jesus of the New Testament and situates him in our weary, jaded, media-saturated society. And unlike other contemporary Christian novelists who transparently take aim at all things left of center, Myers delivers a messiah who transcends politics, eschewing both the Left and the Right in favor of a place his listeners have never heard of, called "The Kingdom of God." Eli's travels with his disciples-- who include a pornography mogul and a white supremacist--enlighten, entertain and challenge both his fictive and actual audience. Yet it's disappointing that the novel climaxes as Eli's betrayer is revealed; the crucifixion, resurrection and ascension feel like afterthoughts--events that deeply affect Conrad but not necessarily anyone else. Despite this and other lapses, such as Eli's uncharacteristically lame explanation for the absence of female disciples, this is a refreshing departure from the usual clich s of popular Christian fiction. (Aug.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

Ask a Question

Author/Artist Review