The Lost Prophets - By Gimpel Lee

It was a story about lust and jealousy and greed and redemption, which she experienced as a young girl in Florida. The story culminated where she had to choose between riches or poverty. She chose poverty.

During that week, Mrs. Adams said, out of boredom, the forces of good and evil wager on certain lives and on the way they handle temptations. How these people responded determined who won their soul.

Excerpt from The Lost Prophets
Purchase the book here.

  • The Lost Prophets Book

    Throughout the year 1812, the British Empire was expanding; their Armada was a dominant force throughout the world, and they were at war with the United States. Since it proclaimed its independence from England in July of 1776, the young United States nation struggled to keep its union intact

    Read the complete prologue here.

  • About Gimpel Lee

    Influenced by John Bunyan's 1678 best seller The Pilgrim's Progress, I always had it in the back of my mind to write a novel using that book as a model. Of coarse, I was not original in my approach. Many books have been written using that vane before and after Mr. Bunyan's, but I believe his was one of the first to depict the journey...

    Learn more about the author.

  • The Facts Behind The Lost Prophets

    Was Commodore Isaac Hull born in Derby, Connecticut? Who is Lou DeFilippo? Was the Howe Pin Machine invented in the Valley and did it help ignite the American Industrial Revolution?

    These questions and more answered on the facts page for The Lost Prophets.

    Continue reading on the facts.

  • Klingers

    About five years ago, a friend of mine saw the need for something to fill the long uneventful gap between Holidays. That something he called Klinging. Armed with plastic images of Pilgrims, Turkeys and pumpkins he purchased at a local Dollar Store, he drove around and stuck these "Klings" to friends' cars and trucks.

    Find out more about Klinging.

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Book image used on the home page compliments of Soozika on Flickr.com. Thank you!

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