Til' Debt Do Us Part, is about faith, love and compromise that put a couple faiths to the test. They find themselves with an addiction that up roots their lives and love ones. Nikki is very bright and intelligent, but the addiction is so powerful her love for her job is put in jeopardy along with her marriage. Nikki and Jeff are from two different worlds, Nikki is from the not so rich but let's just say is better off then...
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Jeff and Nikki Singleton is a young married couple who have their whole lives ahead of them. Jeff created a five-year financial plan that will allow them to live in a comfortable manner. He is determined to not live in the poverty that he grew up in. But his strict five year plans are starting to take its toll on Nikki. Nikki decides to find an outlet for her frustrations...the casino. Nikki thinks that she has her secret...
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By most standards, Nichole`Nikki' Singleton has a life full of blessings; a devoted husband, upwardly mobile career, loving family and good friends. Yet, something inside taunts her to the point of destruction. Will she continue to give in to the taunts and lose what matters most? Will her husband, feeling betrayed, stay with her "for better or worse, in sickness and in health?" Through the lens of fiction, Michelle Larks...
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'Til Debt Do Us Part" is an interesting integration of gambling addiction and spiritual counseling. The development of the story line becomes the focus on stressors to a marriage and the strength required of a family to weather some "storms in life." Because this is Christian fiction, I think the author "hedged" on some of the reactions of the characters. Nevertheless it was an audacious attempt to have a woman addicted and...
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When Nikki and Jeff married, Jeff devised a five-year plan for their life together. During the first five years, they were to lay the groundwork for a life financially stable enough for them to start a family. At the core of having a five-year financial plan was Jeff's desire to never live in poverty. Though Jeff's plan was a good one, he became tenacious about following it and, as a result, he was viewed as controlling...
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