Showing posts with label christmas fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label christmas fiction. Show all posts

Sunday, 6 January 2019

The Homecoming Tree by Bruce Hennigan


Roy Anderson is about to make the worst decision of his life and leave his family for selfish reasons on Thanksgiving day, 2001. But, thanks to the prayers of his son, an angel sends Roy back in time to 1941 with no memories. There, he will experience the true meaning of family, sacrifice, love, and commitment when he is taken in at the Collinsworth boarding house. For a U. S. Army Corps pilot, Frank Collinsworth has not been heard from since the attack on Pearl Harbor and the family waits anxiously to see if he will return home by Christmas. Daniel, the younger Collinsworth, must decide if he will have to become the man of the house while everyone prays around the Homecoming Christmas Tree for his father’s return. Will Roy revert to the ruthless businessman he has become, or will his time spent with the Collinsworth family give him a second chance?

The Guru's Review: 


Bruce Hennigan has a new fan! This is the first novel by this author I have now read. I have 4 of his other novels in The Chronicles of Jonathan Steele waiting to be read. Having now read The Homecoming Tree, I am very impressed with Hennigan's writing, his imagination and his spiritual elements.

I was taken by the description on Amazon when I saw it was about to be novelised from the play version, I contacted the author on Facebook and asked if there would be a kindle version. He stated there would be in the near future and based on this, I volunteered to review it for him. I was sent a review copy for my Kindle but ended up buying it when the Kindle version was released.

I added this novel to the Christmas fiction list that I now read every December. I can see that this novel has the potential to become a Christmas classic and there is one movie that was brought to mind while reading this that it is similar to, and that is, "It's A Wonderful Life" (released in 1947). Despite having only seen only snippets of this movie, I picked up the similar plot lines, themes and the way of life depicted in the 1940s. Then at the end of the novel, Hennigan confirms this in his notes after the novel's ending that this movie was the inspiration for this novel. While I am not a fan of the movie, (I cannot take to Jimmy Stewart and that style of movie), I reckon The Homecoming Tree would make a great movie and one I would enjoy watching in that era!

This novel has an interesting and unique evolvement. It started out as a play called "The Night Gift". In it, a character, Mr Collinbird, was introduced and later became the character of Daniel Collinsworth in this novel. The Night Gift had Mr Collinbird tell of his most memorable Christmas where he told a very poignant story of being thirteen and going into the woods to cut down a Christmas tree because his father had not yet returned from the attack on Pearl Harbor. It proved to be one of the most powerful scenes in The Night Gift.

What followed was testimonies from Veterans for the poignancy of the plotline involving Pearl Harbour especially from one of them who was a Pearl Harbor veteran. Another was from a lady whose brother died at Pearl Harbor and she had been angry at God over his death. The play allowed her to say goodbye to her brother and find peace with his death and God for the first time since.

Hennigan's friend, Larry Robison then asked when would he be telling the story of the boy who cut down the Christmas tree. It was the events in Hennigan's life that followed from this request that formed the basis of the foundation for the telling of Mr Collinbird's story that became this novel but it is too long here to account but I encourage every reader to read these details in the Preface of the novel. These details outline that this novel is based on real events both personal, family and otherwise. It culminated in The Homecoming Tree being performed as a play in November 2005 to a "fabulous reception" and then the author spent from then until now to release it in October 2018 as a novel with some changes from the play.

On this latter point, I am so glad he did. Now this story is able to get a wider audience who will be exposed to the miraculous nature of God, the power of prayer, the affirming nature and importance of family and its dynamics that lead to a stable well-functioning society. Hennigan set this play and novel in this war-torn era as it was after WWII that everything changed from this standard. Hennigan states in the Preface that he set it in this era for the story to be

"....a breath of fresh air. This story reminds us of a time when good and evil were clearly defined; when sacrifice meant something far different from having to turn off your cell phone during dinner, when men and women rose to the challenge of ridding this world of the heinous evil of totalitarianism and genocide. It is a story of the "Greatest Generation," and I have learned much from that story. I hope you do too."
All those elements Hennigan has embedded in this story arcs. It is very noticeable and you can see how different the way of life was compared to this modern age. Successful authors recreate the era and time of the novel's time period and transport the reader there where they feel part of this setting. I definitely felt like I was there and could quite easily identify with the attitudes and behaviour of the people despite my birth being 20 years later. Like Daniel, I imagined myself as a superhero and used to play out scenes from comics and the TV shows (although there was no TV depicted in this era in this novel as this was introduced in 1948 in America).

From Hennigan's quote above, I could see another reason why he set this play and novel in the 1940s. It has to do with the spiritual climate and attitude of Americans (and probably other parts of the world too). Belief in God was more prevalent and practised in life prior to WWII. Hennigan explains in the Final Note at the back of the novel,

Someone asked me why I didn't put a more direct Christian message in this play.....I didn't have to. In......1941, the vast majority of American citizens believed in a God who had direct control of their lives and the events that were unfolding around the world. Rather than wonder where God was, they prayed to God to intervene and bring peace to the world. Prayers were said around the dinner table every night in millions of homes across the country. Entertainers routinely appealed to the intervention of God and His goodness and mercy in their radio programs, movies and personal appearances. We were a country steeped in reverence to the God of the Bible.
Things have changed. Belief in God is an exception, not the rule. Mention of God is no longer allowed in public places, and we are in danger of losing the name of God in all of our government documents, historical and current.
Hennigan's message behind the play and now the novel is from the same Final Note, 
....as you enjoy The Homecoming Tree, try and recall a time when it was okay to believe in God. A time when it was ok to talk about God and pray to (Him) in public. We need more heroes for God now than ever before in the history of this great country.
This heartfelt sentiment is not just that, we need to see it as a wake-up call not just for America but worldwide.

I can see readers becoming endeared to Frank, Ann Lee and Daniel Collinsworth, Ray Castle, these being the main characters while the opposite being true for Esau and Lazarus Cheatwood. The former representing the good of this era and the latter two being the evilness and typical of the evil that was taking over society's standards at that time and one that has only continued and gained more footing and influence in this modern age and becoming the norm.

Despite the evilness and the deceptiveness of Esau and Lazarus and the nefarious scheme that would adversely affect the Collinsworths, I found their antics rather comical! Not sure if this was intentional on Hennigan's part but they reminded me of two bumbling wanna be thieves who believe they will hit the jackpot from their efforts far and above anyone else in the past and who will use the War to further their cause including the disappearance of Frank Collinsworth.

But this story is not just about these two characters. Running alongside and with this plot arc is the effects on the Collinsworth family as they attempt to deal with the disappearance of Frank, notably how Daniel deals with his father's absence. It is here that Hennigan interweaves the theme about the Homecoming Tree, being the man of the house in the absence of his father, about honour, respect and sacrifice. It is also about Ray finding out who he is, why he has been transported back in time, and mentally and spiritually fighting the Shadowman (his alter ego being and a link to who he used to be, one who was corrupt, selfish, deceptive and destructive who has lost all respect for himself, his wife, his son and his business) and one whom God has sent back to this era for him to realise what being an honourable man is, father and businessman is and then to chose which man he will be in the future.

It is also about how a country prepares and reacts to their inevitable entry into a war they were reluctant to enter but whose hand was forced when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor.

All these elements intersect to make for one intriguing and engaging story that pulls on you on all levels.


You want to see how Daniel copes with his father's absence, does he give up hope that his father is alive, does he live up to his father's heritage and legacy to become the man of the house, does he allow himself to go through this coming of age tradition by chopping down the tree planted by his father at his birth and it to become their Christmas tree. It is here that this tradition takes on a deeper and more significant meaning and a symbol of hope for his father's return for Christmas.

You want to see if Ray/Roy finds out who he is, does he overcome the Shadowman, does he learn the lesson that God has set for him by returning him to this era, does he choose the man he wants to be from what he has learnt from living in 1941 and suffer or benefit from the consequences of this decision? Does he learn about family, love, integrity and loyalty?

You want to see if Esau Cheatwood succeeds in deceiving the Collinsworth family and achieving the rewards of his nefarious scheme. You want to see if justice will prevail even in this innocent era before a society-changing war that will see life take on a path of no return. Will the Collinsworth family stand up to the Cheatwoods and defend their family values and their faith?

You want to see if Roy is the man you hope he chooses to be when God returns him to the present time. Will his son's prayer to restore him have been answered? Who really is Mike in the future and Mickey of 1941?

Once all these questions are established by the second half of this novel, you cannot give up reading, you have to see this novel through to the end. And it is very rewarding and satisfying. All the loose ends, plot arcs are tied up very well, and there are some plot twists towards the end as Hennigan skillfully does this. It is a great ending. It resulted in me having tears of joy, of victory over evilness, of who God is, how all things work together for the good of those who love God; for those who are called according to His purpose.

Hennigan provides the headlines of the era covering what was newsworthy in the various areas of life in 1941 at the beginning of each chapter. I could relate to some of it as these were part of my upbringing, even 20 years or more later. I especially loved the inclusion of the song, "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy of Company B" by the Andrew Sisters. My mother had this song on a special Reader's Digest compilation collection and I was hooked as a teenager when she bought this collection. I still love this song, an iconic song of WWII! These headlines not provide more of the background of the current history of the era but add credibility and a realistic quality to this era. Great insights into how life was then. I loved Hennigan's inclusion of other background information on some of the War events that he describes in the novel. Some poetic licence has been added for the story. It would enhance the enjoyment for the reader to read all of these appendices that contain the information regarding the history of Shreveport (in the section called Sources), Afterword which contains details of the inaugural play of The Homecoming Tree, list of facts about life in 1941, research on the town of Shreveport's role in the War effort. 


This is a great novel and one I will fondly look back on. It would be worthwhile re-reading this again. Hennigan shows a great passion for the supernatural acts of God, the Gospel of Christ and not comprising our faith or anything relating to God.

Hennigan is now an author to follow and support. 


Highly Recommended.

The three ratings below are based on my discernment:

World Building: 5/5

Characters: 5/5

Story: 5/5

The two classifications below are based on the booklet, A Spiritual System for Rating Books by David Bergsland:

Spiritual Level: 4/5

Enemy Spiritual Level: 3/5

Overall Rating: 4.4/5

To buy or preview this novel, click on the BUY/PREVIEW icon below:

Sunday, 16 December 2018

The Unannounced Christmas Visitor by Patrick Higgins

The Unannounced Christmas Visitor

What if angels really did come from the most unlikely of places? That’s exactly what happens in this heartwarming story, set in a homeless community in Anywhere USA. Sent to Planet Earth by his Maker, disguised as a homeless person, Enoch was on a mission: to rescue a man whose life was slowly but steadily spiralling out of control. Inspired by Hebrews 13:2, “Do not forget to show hospitality to strangers, for by so doing some people have shown hospitality to angels without knowing it,” this story will stir your soul like never before, guaranteed!

The Guru's Review: 

I bought this novel two years ago after the author recommending it to me after reading one of his other novels. The description inspired me to not only buy it but start my own Christmas fiction "collection" and that I would read in this genre during December every year. I have read in many genres and this was one that I had not. For the past two years, I had intended to read during December and every year I mentioned to the author that I would do so! But as we all experience, our plans get re-directed or changed. Life gets in the way! This is the third December that I have only read Christmas fiction during this month. This year, I was determined to read the novel that started this new trend in my reading.

Since then, I have read some wonderful, inspiring, uplifting and award-winning Christmas fiction. And I applaud the Christian authors who write in this genre. I have never been blessed so much regarding the true meaning of Christmas and the Gospel and it has definitely challenged and strengthened my faith in God. 

The Unannounced Christmas Visitor is now the novel that has challenged me and blessed me the most out of all the Christmas fiction I have read over the last 2 years. 

This is a truly Spirit-filled story! It is powerful on many levels. The reader will be challenged, convicted, outraged, disgusted and infuriated. This is written by one author who is very much focused on God and is under His direction and guidance. Higgins shows an in-depth understanding of what it means to be homeless and society's attitude and behaviour towards it and to those who are. Maybe what is more shocking in this regard is how some Christians take this attitude to the next level of judgement and disapproval and appear worse than those who do not know Jesus. It was here and the scenes that depicted this that both challenged and infuriated me. I have seen similar in my church life in both these two areas. And it is here that Higgins allows the Spirit of God to challenge the reader, especially those who are Christian to check their attitude and see in what areas of their mind and heart they need to change and have it replaced with the heart of God.

Higgins depicts the various aspects of the Christian's attitude and behaviour through the members of the Jensen family and their church family. Lydia, the mother is the one who shows more of the heart of God in her discernment of the attitude towards Enoch, the homeless man who attends church and of those in the Church who display such a judgemental and disapproved attitude towards him. What struck me here, with Lydia's character was that this is reflective of the fact that women are more spiritually sensitive to men so it did not surprise me that Higgins depicted her this way seeing that her husband had lost his focus on God and had allowed himself to be spiritually oppressed by humanistic attitudes of those around him and the influence of his upbringing.

We have one of Lydia's friends who has no direct contact with Enoch but who shy away from her because of her interaction with Enoch and how this makes her feel uncomfortable. We have the couple who contribute large sums of money to this megachurch who "evict" Enoch from the front row of the church solely due to their exaggerated importance and the fact that they believe vagrants have no place in the church. We have the ushers who are seemingly powerless to act on their own and follow the "orders" of this couple in placing Enoch at the back of the church. I related to Lydia's reaction to these people and events as she questions if she was really in the House of God and that her church family were not behaving as if they have the heart of God towards Enoch. I was saddened, disappointed, and infuriated here more than she was!


This novel has been criticised for its long sections of preaching by the character Enoch. I have come across this many times in novels, but I cannot understand the validity of this criticism. If the reader, Christian or not, wants to be just entertained, then they have chosen the wrong novel. Not all Christian novels solely entertain. Most Christian authors write because they have a message from God that He has encouraged them to include into their novels. This novel is a classic example.

I found these "long" sections of "preaching" necessary to the very essence of this novel. Sure, it did seem as if the plot and pace were on temporary hold while Enoch discussed with John about his spiritual state, what it meant to be homeless, the spiritual aspects towards this, and how he tied it all in with the heart of God. It is here that this novel is powerful and packs a great impact. I was challenged, inspired, encouraged and convicted during these instances of long narrative. It is this that I find and welcome in Christian fiction that it has this effect on the reader to not just entertain, but to minister more of who God is, how we are to live out the Gospel and be a willing vessel for His use to a hurting and fallen humanity. Higgins shines here. I was awestruck at how he composed these sections. The author may have been writing but the Spirit of God was speaking in these narratives. If the reader has a teachable spirit, then this novel will impact and influence them greatly. It will change the reader's heart and mind toward this topic of homelessness, hopelessness and how Christians judge and disapprove of anything that places us outside our comfort zone or especially when their heart attitude and behaviour is contrary to what and how the Spirit and the Bible encourage and instruct us to live. But what breaks through here is the message of hope, redemption and restoration that only God can provide. 


The way the author depicted this through Enoch, Lydia, Matthew, John, Grace and even the homeless characters was brilliant. I came to love the latter, Leroy, Suzie, Rocky, Troy, Dillon, Pedro, Wanda, Tiwanna and by the end of the novel, I had stopped seeing them as homeless and hopeless but as people who are not defined by their homelessness or their circumstances but as people who are striving to be more than this. It was a classic example of how the Spirit works in and through us, however different we are to each other and how He is able to work all this together to achieve His aim of breaking down barriers and attitudes that close us off from the situations others are in and our response to them so He can have His way and save us from our sin.

Spiritually, Higgins is spot on with his inclusion of biblical theology and doctrine as depicted through Enoch. One could view the counsel of Enoch as true biblical counselling especially in his dealings with John's spiritual state. It really does show that the work of the Spirit is the correct way here as long as the person affected has a teachable spirit and has no hardness of heart and wants to change. I was so impressed with Higgins' dealing with this issue, his knowledge of the Bible and how he applied all this to the specifics of John's emotional, mental and spiritual state.

I loved the narrative of Enoch about the biblical references of the Nativity and accounts of Jesus' birth. Again, Higgins ties this exceptionally well together into a cohesive "story". I found this to be an effective Bible study on its own.


I need to make mention of the character of Enoch. Yes, that Enoch, the Biblical Enoch! If Enoch is anything like Higgins has depicted him, I can hardly wait to meet him in Heaven! So many times, I kept thinking, "Is this really Enoch, or is it, Jesus?" I would not have been surprised if it was Jesus! So Christ-like was Enoch! It really impressed upon me how much I would love to attain the many behaviours he had developed from his relationship with God. Higgins has depicted him as seeing clearly, figuratively speaking, in full understanding and knowledge now he is with God and this is a great encouragement for us to cherish once we are united with God in Heaven. 

As with any novel, or most, the plot has been developed to reach a peak where all the plot arcs come to a head, where everything is tied up for the ending. This novel has a very satisfying finale. It is uplifting, inspirational, emotional and joyous. I cried for such a long time. Not only for the joyous ending but for the way this novel has changed me, for what the Spirit of God has impacted on my heart and challenged me in my relationship to others and to Him. I came out of this with such a worshipful attitude and a sense of gratefulness and thankfulness for what He has done for myself and mankind.

Looking back on this novel, it is evident that to write such a story like this, the author has to be in tune with the Spirit and to also be writing what he lives. I am so encouraged by Higgins as a man of God and author. This is one novel that will have a special place in my library and in my heart. 

Highly Recommended.

The three ratings below are based on my discernment:

World Building 5/5

Characters 5/5

Story 5/5

The two classifications below are based on the booklet, A Spiritual System for Rating Books by David Bergsland:

Spiritual Level 5/5

Enemy Spiritual Level 5/5

Overall Rating: 5/5

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Spiritually, based on my review and on the following reference booklet,

A Spiritual System for Rating Books by David Bergsland, and that The Unannounced Christmas Visitor contains elements of the criteria of what constitutes Christian Spirit-filled  Fiction outlined in this booklet, (click on the title below to see what this is based on), I bestow unto Patrick Higgins with the

Congratulations, Patrick!

To buy or preview this novel, click on the BUY/PREVIEW icon below:

Sunday, 17 December 2017

The Christmas Star by Robert Tate Miller


Paul Bennett had the perfect wife, the perfect family, the perfect life—until one fateful Christmas brought an unthinkable tragedy. In deep despair, he turns to drinking to drive away the pain, but he only succeeds in driving away his wife. His marriage shattered, his family gone, Paul now despises Christmas.
But can the holiday he so detests hold a miraculous surprise? After an accident in which he loses consciousness, he wakes up in the company of the shepherds who will soon travel to Bethlehem to see the newborn Christ in the manger. Can Paul find salvation on the night that forever changed the world? Can he discover the true spirit of Christmas?

The Guru's Review: 

I "bought" this novel as a free download earlier this week from Amazon. I love reading Christmas novels during December to encourage myself of the importance and meaning of this season. Despite this being subtitled as a love story and I am not attracted to romance novels with this being the main story arc, I was drawn to this novel by the travel back in time to period of Jesus' birth and the encounter the main character had with the shepherds who visited Him. I love time travel as a story arc and especially ones that have the time travel destination as that of Jesus time.

I could not put this novel down. I really enjoyed the romance of the first half. It was not sugary sweet or mushy. I appreciated it being told from Paul's point of view. This definitely helped me relate to the romance side of it. I enjoy romance when it is not a major theme of the novel and when written by a male author. In this novel, it made no difference being a major story arc. I actually loved it.

Miller writes very well and it is this that contributes to the flow of the story, the character development and the expectation of what is to happen next. For me, this is a great drawcard.

When an author writes the main character in the first person narrative, it is essential that it comes across to the reader as if this character is narrating the story. Not only that, but the character has to be credible and relatable. If not, this character is not convincing and the reader feels disconnected and cannot relate to them. Miller avoids this pitfall and writes in this narrative exceptionally well. I felt like I was in Paul's head. I experienced the emotions he did. I could relate to all these. Especially his grief when he lost Megan, his daughter. I know what that is like despite the fact that my loss was a baby and the circumstances did not lead me to consider that I had contributed to this loss. But I definitely felt for Paul. I wanted to come alongside him and help him through his grief. I wanted to convince him, show him that it was not his fault, and his guilt is misplaced, despite this being a normal reaction. I wanted to show him that his spiralling into alcohol abuse was not the way to handle it, and he was giving up. But I can see why Miller developed it like this, to show the reality of man's reaction to adversity, in this case, the death of a loved one and how this can either confirm their existing unbelief in God or show how an existing relationship could falter and almost lead to unbelief.

I remember when we lost our baby daughter how hard it was to get back to God. I never blamed God but it nevertheless made it hard for me to re-establish my relationship with Him. I can fully understand Paul's reaction to blaming God for not preventing Megan's death and how this easily disconnected Paul from Him. I feel that men's handling of grief is very different to women's and that men may feel it just as deeply as women but their reaction is directly connected to how God has "wired" them. Like Paul, his tears fell when he encountered Jesus at the manger, mine was with my wife, Pastor, specific family and friends, but on a very personal level, the majority of them were on my own while praying to God during the many weeks and months following her death. And it was here that God healed and restored me. It was why I cried when Paul did the same when he came face to face with Jesus. I leapt for joy when he accepted Jesus' love, salvation and when he declared he was redeemed. This nativity scene is very powerful and it would not surprise me if God uses this to minister to both men and women in their despair from life's adversity.

Miller developed this scene so realistically that I do not have any doubt that the Spirit was behind this nativity scene. I applaud authors like Miller when they allow the Spirit to guide them in their writing to minister to the reader's needs on whatever level they are. I have stated in the Why Christian Fiction? tab on this blog that God can use authors and their craft in Christian fiction to not just entertain, but educate, edify the reader's spirit, show them more of God and His ways and lead them into a deeper relationship with Him. This is not the first novel, where I have been ministered to through the author's obedience to the Spirit and in what the Spirit has directed the author to develop in their story arc.

I know that romance is predominantly targeted at the female audience, Christian and non-Chrisitan alike but can romance have a place in men's reading lives as well? I believe so and this novel is one example where it can show men what Christian marriage should be and how God can heal/restore a fractured married relationship and give their love a second chance. Interesting how this second chance is not really a second chance. If He restores their relationship, then they will stronger, better and bigger in their relationship/romance towards each other and in Him. This has been my experience from losing a loved one. It brought my wife and I closer together and, like Paul, I will see our daughter again. I cried, even more, when Paul met Megan at the nativity scene as it gave me a glimpse of what our reunion is going to be like in Heaven. 

I loved the story arc that involved Paul being transported into the lives of the shepherds that had the encounter with the angel announcing the birth of Jesus. The feelings between Elisabeth and Paul was instrumental in preparing him for the healing of his relationship between his wife and God. Again, Miller does this very well and is very clever in its orchestration.

For many of the world's population, Christmas can be a time devoid of joy, family, love, and what Christmas means. Miller shows in this novel, what Christmas is all about, the birth of Jesus, what this means, who He is and the power of His very presence from who Him being God. I pray that God uses this novel to heal and minister to any reader who needs to experience the message of this novel and of the Gospel of Christ.

There are times when I come across a novel that I know God wants me to read. This is another one of those novels. I rejoice in this novel where it has given me another opportunity to be ministered to by an engaging and therapeutic story that is fully guided by the Spirit of God.

I will definitely be reading Miller's other novels. He has been added to my list of male romance authors.

I highly recommend this novel. 

World Building 5/5

Characterisation 5/5

Story 5/5

Spiritual Level 5/5

Enemy Spiritual Level N/A 

Overall Rating 5/5 Stars 

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Spiritually, based on my review and on the following reference booklet,



A Spiritual System for Rating Books by David Bergsland, and that The Christmas Star contains elements of the criteria of what constitutes Christian Redemptive Fiction outlined in this booklet, I award Robert Tate Miller with


The Reality Calling Redemptive Fiction Award



Congratulations Robert!

If you would like to read an excerpt or buy this novel, click on the BUY/PREVIEW icons on the image below: