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Paperback War and Grace: Short Biographies from the World Wars Book

ISBN: 0852345941

ISBN13: 9780852345948

War and Grace: Short Biographies from the World Wars

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Here is a fascinating insight into the influence of the gospel on the lives of people who lived through the World Wars and the events that led up to them. Read about: The Japanese pilot who led the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Perfect for the male (and female)

Far exceeded my expectations! Stephens is a good storyteller relating about events about which we all know -- but with details that have been left out over the years. And each biography can be read in 30 minutes are less. Especially wonderful for that person who likes history -- but hates to read.

War and Grace

An excellent group of short stories of men and women caught up in war. In each case, "nonbeliever" ends up - as the book title suggests - with Grace. Of course it could have helped me to have my British cousin listed in the Acknowledgments section of the book. Actually that led me to the book but the stories were, each in their own way, compelling.

Fascinating Short Biographies

I have an avid interest in the Second World War. I am of the generation whose grandfathers fought in the war and I have always been proud of the contributions made by members of my family. My maternal grandfather, Lawrence Belford, wished to fly bombers but was not permitted because of poor eyesight. Still, he served the Royal Canadian Air Force as a member of the ground crew, loading bombs into Lancaster bombers. He would often recount his memories of the war and at one point I even conducted an interview with him. My grandmother's brother, Harold, was a Spitfire pilot who lost his life in a mission over the Mediterranean. My paternal grandfather, George Challies, whom I never met, was a Lieutenant Colonel and I am unsure of his contribution, though I believe he commanded an artillery training centre in Quebec. When I was in college I majored in history (my minor was in euchre) and took every possible course that centered around the war years. While I have since turned to other interests I continue to have a fascination with the war and read about it as often as I am able. This fascination led me to read War and Grace: Short Biographies from the World Wars, a book of brief biographies written by Don Stephens. The thirteen biographies have one thing in common - the subjects are all Christians. A few of these people were believers long before the war began, while others were converted during or after the war. What I found particularly interesting is that I knew of many of the people whose lives are examined in this book, yet I had no idea that they had become Christians. For example, anyone who has studied the war knows of Mitsuo Fuchida who was the chief pilot for the Japanese in the attack on Pearl Harbour. He is famous for giving the signal to attack and then crying "Tora! Tora! Tora!, the codeword to indicate that the Japanese had achieved complete surprise. But what fewer know, I'm sure, is that after the war he became a believer and spent the rest of his life in passionate, fruitful ministry to the Lord. Years after the war Fuchida crossed paths with another subject of this book, Jacob DeShazer, one of the Doolittle Raiders who spent several years in Japanese custody after his plane crashed. In prison he was given a Bible and in his autobiography he writes, "On June 8th, 1944, the words of Romans 10:9 stood out boldly before my eyes: 'If thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved.' In that very moment God gave me grace to confess my sins to him, and he forgave me and saved me for Jesus' sake..." After the war DeShazer became a missionary and spent much of his life ministering in Japan. His ministry continues to this day. The final chapter was the one I found most fascinating. The author writes about Henry Gerecke who was the Protestant (Lutheran) chaplain to the Nazi war criminals during their trial at Nuremberg. Dedicating many months to sha
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