Buy from our bookstore and 25% of the cover price will be given to a school of your choice to buy more books. *15% of eBooks.
Audiobooks Narrated by Tim Stephenson
Browse audiobooks narrated by Tim Stephenson, listen to samples and when you're ready head over to Audiobooks.com where you can get 3 FREE audiobooks on us
Step aboard a ship adrift in the heart of an ominous sea, where the waves whisper secrets and the night holds chilling mysteries. In this gripping tale, listeners will accompany the ship's captain as he grapples with his own sanity and faces an otherworldly presence that defies comprehension.
As the captain battles his inner demons and the sinister forces that encroach upon his vessel, the line between reality and nightmare blurs. The evocative narration captures his descent into madness, his struggle for survival, and his desperate attempts to confront the malevolent entity that stalks him.
With vivid imagery and spine-tingling prose, 'O' Great Bornless One' transports you to a realm where terror takes shape and the unknown takes hold. Prepare to immerse yourself in a world of chilling suspense, where every creak of the ship, every echoing footstep, and every whispered thought will send shivers down your spine.
This imaginatively illustrated book includes eight dragon myths from China, Greece, Japan, England, Iceland, and even America--and explains why we are telling these kinds of stories.
This collection tells story after exciting story about dragons. You have probably heard some of them, but some of them will surprise and excite you. We don't just hear the stories of St. George, Perseus, and Thor. We also learn the story of John Lambtown, a man who goes fishing, catches a tiny dragon that quickly grows to epic proportions, and can only be defeated with a bizarre suit of armor. We laugh at the story of the tiny storm god Susannoo who outwits a dragon the size of eight hills with rice wine. We shudder as we hear about the fight of the red and white dragons of Wales and the king that cleverly trapped them. We even get to hear about a dragon that terrorized Indians in Illinois.
Each of these stories resonates with us because of something deep in the human imagination that loves to hear about fighting fierce dragons. In the Garden of Eden, it was a dragon that tricked our first parents, and at the end of the Bible, the book of Revelation, the dragon is identified as Satan. Pastor and author Tim Chester explains what these stories mean, and how we should live in the world as a result.