But Now I See: Book 1 of "To Sing God's Praise

A Journey in Three Parts"

Fiction & Literature, Military, Westerns, Religious
Cover of the book But Now I See: Book 1 of "To Sing God's Praise by Carl Jon Munson, Katie LC Philpott, Earthen Vessel Publishing
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Author: Carl Jon Munson, Katie LC Philpott ISBN: 9780996859080
Publisher: Earthen Vessel Publishing Publication: February 1, 2017
Imprint: Earthen Vessel Publishing Language: English
Author: Carl Jon Munson, Katie LC Philpott
ISBN: 9780996859080
Publisher: Earthen Vessel Publishing
Publication: February 1, 2017
Imprint: Earthen Vessel Publishing
Language: English

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Amos Nordquist didn’t start out to be a minister, much less one in the American Civil War. Strong, handsome, intelligent, and wealthy, he intended to eventually head Nordquist Shipping, the Swedish shipping company begun by his father, Stig Nordquist, decades earlier. A devastating storm at sea, however, destroys two Nordquist ships and all but a few crewmen, one of whom was Amos. Floating in a lifeboat on the North Atlantic, Amos has an epiphany and determines that if he survives, he will “do the Lord’s work,” although at that moment he is unsure of what God might have planned.

Circumstances bring him to America, and But Now I See, the first book in the To Sing God’s Praise trilogy*,* begins with Pastor Nordquist, “the big preacher,” in Murray, Idaho, the last major Old West gold strike, where he befriends Angus MacGregor, a burly prospector with a penchant for Scotch and an insatiable interest in all things spiritual. Angus asks how a Swedish pastor winds up in Murray, and the reader hears the story, including the hurricane, the lifeboat, the decision, a seeming betrayal, the Russians, the Einar II arson, the intruder, coming to America to find an uncle, and serving under Gen. George Custer at Sailor’s Creek and Appomattox.

Following the war, Nordquist heads north with “Fatha Abraham” Cole, a self-educated former slave intent on teaching other former slaves, and the reader gets an education in antebellum slavery. Nordquist settles in Minnesota where he meets his beautiful wife, Anna, and the reader experiences their challenges as they have children, plant churches and schools, and minister in rural hinterlands.

But Now I See does three things: as with all good novels, it entertains, but it also teaches and edifies, making the reader hungry for more, the time well spent.

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<

Amos Nordquist didn’t start out to be a minister, much less one in the American Civil War. Strong, handsome, intelligent, and wealthy, he intended to eventually head Nordquist Shipping, the Swedish shipping company begun by his father, Stig Nordquist, decades earlier. A devastating storm at sea, however, destroys two Nordquist ships and all but a few crewmen, one of whom was Amos. Floating in a lifeboat on the North Atlantic, Amos has an epiphany and determines that if he survives, he will “do the Lord’s work,” although at that moment he is unsure of what God might have planned.

Circumstances bring him to America, and But Now I See, the first book in the To Sing God’s Praise trilogy*,* begins with Pastor Nordquist, “the big preacher,” in Murray, Idaho, the last major Old West gold strike, where he befriends Angus MacGregor, a burly prospector with a penchant for Scotch and an insatiable interest in all things spiritual. Angus asks how a Swedish pastor winds up in Murray, and the reader hears the story, including the hurricane, the lifeboat, the decision, a seeming betrayal, the Russians, the Einar II arson, the intruder, coming to America to find an uncle, and serving under Gen. George Custer at Sailor’s Creek and Appomattox.

Following the war, Nordquist heads north with “Fatha Abraham” Cole, a self-educated former slave intent on teaching other former slaves, and the reader gets an education in antebellum slavery. Nordquist settles in Minnesota where he meets his beautiful wife, Anna, and the reader experiences their challenges as they have children, plant churches and schools, and minister in rural hinterlands.

But Now I See does three things: as with all good novels, it entertains, but it also teaches and edifies, making the reader hungry for more, the time well spent.

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