In Unholy Union, Bunny Stevens takes the reader on a harrowing journey through the darkest of betrayals-occasioned, ironically, in settings that should shelter and protect: home and church. Within these sacred spaces, a child is abused and a young woman is raped by her minister and told, "God wanted me to do it." Ultimately, though, this is a story of victory over those who shamed her, renounced her, and commanded her to "go away and tell no one." In Unholy Union, the author breaks her 50-year silence. With heartbreaking transparency, she tells us what no one wants to believe can actually happen. Then she tells us who ultimately wins.
In Unholy Union, Bunny Stevens takes the reader on a harrowing journey through the darkest of betrayals-occasioned, ironically, in settings that should shelter and protect: home and church. Within these sacred spaces, a child is abused and a young woman is raped by her minister and told, "God wanted me to do it." Ultimately, though, this is a story of victory over those who shamed her, renounced her, and commanded her to "go away and tell no one." In Unholy Union, the author breaks her 50-year silence. With heartbreaking transparency, she tells us what no one wants to believe can actually happen. Then she tells us who ultimately wins.