The Resurrection
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A Collison Course to Destruction
âÂÂThe Resurrectionâ recounts the hidden secrets of Stonetree, a small coastal town in California. While attending the funeral of young Armondo Amaya, Ruby Case took her turn in line with family and friends to pay their final respect to the young boy. On an impulse Ruby reached out to touch the body. After a short prayer; when she removed her hand Mondo suddenly sat up in his coffin.
A chain of events that follow MondoâÂÂs resurrection take the reader into the conflict between a naturalist explanation and a super-naturalist viewpoint. Controversy erupts in the Stonetree community. Ruby becomes both a hero and a scapegoat. She joins forces with Rev. Ian Clark in a determined effort to find the truth.
Although DuranâÂÂs characters are uniquely developed, it was hard for me to genuinely identify with any of them. The protagonists lacked dimension. Even in their strongest moments they did not come across as real.
DuranâÂÂs creative imagination is contagious. A note for Christian readers: âÂÂThe Resurrectionâ is a book for the reader who is willing to allow their imagination to take them âÂÂoutside of the boxâ of their comfortable theology in areas of the supernatural, ghosts, demons, and the power of curses.
A challenge to live a life of genuine commitment to follow Christ and His teaching is presented throughout the book without feeling âÂÂpreachy.âÂÂ
âÂÂThe Resurrectionâ is entertaining, informative, and thought provoking fiction.
I received a complimentary review copy of this book from the publisher with in consideration of a fair and honest review. As reviewed for Midwest Book Review.
July 9, 2011
Will Challenge Your Beliefs--Whatevere They Are
Mr. Cellophane appears to be a ghost, but what is an apparition doing in the corner of a pastor's study? Reverend Ian Clark doesn't know, but nothing much surprises him any more. He's only been pastoring Canyon Springs Community Church for a year, but even that has been a farce, and he's ready to turn in his resignation. His sister is dead, his wife divorced him, and even his favorite seminary professor has turned away from the church. He's just putting in time.
Three women in Clark's congregation gather regularly to pray. But on this day, Ruby Case has a vision: the huge dead oak tree known as the Stonetree that overlooks the valley sprouts one bright green leaf. Soon after Ruby's vision, she goes to the funeral of young Mondo. Overcome with grief for the family, Ruby touches his body and prays. In front of the eyes of the entire congregation, Mondo sits up in his coffin, resurrected.
The town is not prepared for this, and neither is Reverend Clark...to say nothing of Ruby herself. But all of them are caught up in the swell: Clark in facing his doubts, Ruby in facing petitioners at all hours and hero worship, and the community in facing--well, I don't want to spoil the story for you.
The Resurrection will challenge your beliefs in the spirit world, no matter what they currently are. Author Mike Duran is not making theological claims with his take on occultic practices. In the author notes at the back of the book, he explains where these ideas came from.
What of the story itself? While claiming to be a supernatural suspense novel and certainly having it's creepy moments, I didn't find it excessively horrific (ie: I could sleep at night, lol). Duran told a solid tale with unlikely heroes in a manner that held together very well.
July 5, 2011
I thought it was...good. Not great, not horrible but right in the middle.
April 20, 2011
Great Supernatural 'Spooker'
The Resurrection by Mike Duran is an adult supernatural thriller that had me reading on the edge of my seat, holding my breath, begging for characters to be safe, and pondering spiritual matters that I had not considered seriously for years. What a ride!
I havenâÂÂt read a good âÂÂspookerâ in a long time. The suspense in this book was at times frightening and the surprise plot twists only added to the hold-your-breath suspense. If I was a nail biter, my fingernails would be gnawed down to the skin! The characters were fully-developed ordinary folk, raw, honest in their struggles, and believable â not of the âÂÂtoo good to be trueâ variety. The balance between plot and character was such that no one element stood out. Equal treatment of both made the book flow quickly and dramatically. The author did a fantastic job painting word pictures that gave just enough information â no time was wasted on the unimportant; you were transported into each scene with all five senses fully engaged.
I think what I appreciated the most about this book was that the author did not tie up all of the loose ends into a pretty bow. Many things were left unresolved, just like in real life. I spent days after finishing the book pondering those loose ends and wondering how the characters have fared since the final chapter closedâ¦
There are many lessons to be learned in reading The Resurrection. The first is the challenge to be sure our Christian life not stuck in mediocrity. This is exactly where the Enemy wants us. We are no threat to him or his work if we are lukewarm and apathetic â and God is none to happy about it either (Revelation 3:16). The second lesson is that there is a greater power in prayer than we can fully comprehend. It is the ordinary, garden variety saints who do the great work of God. You donâÂÂt need to be a âÂÂsuperâ Christian with an established, popular, and visible ministry. Our heavenly Father rewards the work that is done in secret. That is where the real battles are waged and won (Ephesians 3:20, Matthew 6:6). The third lesson is continually found throughout Scripture. Any power we have comes not from us, but from God himself to do as he wills. We are to be obedient. The results are up to him.
I give this book 4 stars out of 5.
I received this book free from Strang Publishers and Christian Science Fiction and Fantasy Blog Tour as part of their Blogger Review Program. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own.
March 22, 2011