About the Book
Book: Hearts Set Free
Author: Jess Lederman
Genre: Christian Literary Fiction
Release Date: March 12th, 2019
Join me on a journey from the darkness of doubt to triumphant faith and from the ache of loneliness to everlasting love…
“Bold and forthright writing that would set any heart on fire.”–Christian blogger Miranda A. Uyeh
“Readers of inspirational fiction will love this moving story that affirms the power of God’s mercy.”
–Publisher’s Weekly
–Publisher’s Weekly
In 1930, the rag-tag riffraff of a railway stop called Las Vegas need a fighting man to shepherd their tiny church after their pastor is murdered. Might David Gold, a washed-up boxer and Bible-school dropout who fights as the Pummelin’ Preacher, be the answer to their prayers?
At the same time, Luke, a native Alaskan boy, is on a quest to find his father, who has abandoned his family for a beautiful woman his warrior mother vows to kill. The journey of mother and son will lead them to the Nevada desert, and to truths–and terrors–of which they’d never dreamed.
In 2011, Science Cable T.V. producer Tim Faber is determined to prove that mankind has no need of God, while his lover, Joan Reed, strives to regain the faith of her youth. They’re bound for Las Vegas to meet with a 99-year-old man who holds the key to a mystery they must solve–and answers that will forever change their lives.
Their stories will come together at a little house of worship known as the Church of the Heart Set Free.
“I was mesmerized by the characters and how everything unfolded and linked together…”
–Just One More Paragraph (Musings of a Christian Wife)
–Just One More Paragraph (Musings of a Christian Wife)
Click here to get your copy!
I really wanted to like "Hearts Set Free" by Jess Lederman and I did with one Big complaint, the language was at times strong and I felt it was too often. Yes, the characters aren't Christians but still this book is listed as a Christian novel. There was even Christians cursing in a church meeting. Yes, I know cursing is real life and I have even heard cursing in church, but when I do I literally shiver that people are not honoring God. Yes, I know I am judging and I also know that we are not to judge but I am just being honest here. Cursing is something that I really don't like at all, regardless if it is in speech. television or movies and especially Christian novels.
I really liked the plot and the characters and I liked that the Psalms were a big part of this novel.
There were some twists and things in this story, that caught me unaware and yes, it pulled on my heart strings. This book is a really inspiration novel, except for the thing mentioned in the first paragraph.
This is a novel that really made this reader feel like she was watching the scenes instead of reading them. While reading this book. I wanted to interview Luke and the other characters.
This book mentions people that are familiar to us and is interesting to have them as part of the novel and characters in the story. These characters are Amalia Earhardt, Albert Einstein, Bugsy Siegel and Jack Johnson.
I really liked the plot and the characters and I liked that the Psalms were a big part of this novel.
There were some twists and things in this story, that caught me unaware and yes, it pulled on my heart strings. This book is a really inspiration novel, except for the thing mentioned in the first paragraph.
This is a novel that really made this reader feel like she was watching the scenes instead of reading them. While reading this book. I wanted to interview Luke and the other characters.
This book mentions people that are familiar to us and is interesting to have them as part of the novel and characters in the story. These characters are Amalia Earhardt, Albert Einstein, Bugsy Siegel and Jack Johnson.
I am surprised that I am going to say this, but here goes, I say read this book but again I warn you the language is not Christian at all and there is talk of primatial sex and drug use.
I would give the book 5 stars if the language wasn't so bad but since it is I am giving this book 3 stars. yes, the language is a big turn off.
I was given a complimentary copy by the author and Celebrate Lit. These opinions are my own.
About the Author
After I graduated with a degree in music from Columbia University, a lust for expensive pianos drew me into an unexpected career in finance. It turned out that I had a knack for business; I gained much that the world had to offer and became a hedonist, a gambler who haunted the poker rooms of Las Vegas, and an arrogant atheist. I’ve written fiction for most of my life, and at one point I quit work to devote myself to writing a novel. During that time, my late first wife, Teri, and I lived in Paris, down the street from where Hemingway once lived, and later in the mountains of Idaho. But the novel was never published, for I was a man whose soul had not yet awakened, who did not yet have anything important to say. So I went back to the business world.
One day, when we were living in Dallas, Teri heard a radio interview with Francis Collins, an eminent scientist who wrote The Language of God, which tells the story of his journey from atheism to becoming a disciple of Christ. Collins’ book led us to the writings of C.S. Lewis and George MacDonald*, who became the midwives of our rebirth from above.
There’s no hiding from the Hound of Heaven, once He’s on your trail!
Several years later, Teri was diagnosed with ALS (Lou Gehrig’s Disease) and we left Dallas and the business world behind and moved to a small town in Alaska. There we looked out on the glory of God’s creation and read to our heart’s content during the last two years of her life. Faced with tragedy, we learned to trust utterly in Him, and He blessed us with the peace that surpasses all understanding.
It was after Teri’s death, while I was still living in the far north, that the idea for Hearts Set Free—which opens in the Alaska Territory in 1925—was born. People who know that the novel contains autobiographical elements (and several historical characters) sometimes ask me, “How much of the story is true?’ And I answer, “Perhaps twenty percent—and the rest is even more true!” What drives my writing is the desire to convey truths that transform lives. Truths of the heart.
In 2013, I met a wonderful woman—my current wife, Ling—and soon we began talking about having children. “Impossible!” said our doctors. “According to your test results, there’s no chance at all, even using the latest techniques.” Of course, within two months of that pronouncement, Ling was pregnant with little David, who just turned three, and we subsequently adopted Daniel, who’s now twelve.
After David’s birth, we moved to southwest Washington. I’m currently at work on a novel set in Las Vegas in 1955, and, when I’m not writing or chasing my sons around, can usually be found at the piano playing Chopin nocturnes for Ling.
More from Jess
I first conceived of Hearts Set Free in the far frozen north, not long after my first wife, Teri, passed away. She had been diagnosed with ALS, an invariably fatal disease, when we were living in Dallas, and within a month we decided that I’d quit my job so we could move to a small town in Alaska. We bought a small house based on the view out of the living room windows; there we’d be able to spend the time she had left in peace, and gaze out at the glory of God’s creation.
Teri—a woman who untiringly searched for truth—was the inspiration for Joan Reed, one of the main characters in the book, and Alaska—the Last Frontier!—entered into the story as well. We were living not far from the headquarters of the Iditarod, the iconic thousand-mile dog sled race that takes place each year. The Iditarod was modeled after an amazing race against time which occurred in the icy darkness of an Alaskan winter in 1925, when dogsled was the only way to get diphtheria serum to the remote town of Nome and save ten thousand lives. Hearts Set Free begins with that dramatic event.
I put a lot of myself—the bad along with the good!—into other characters in Hearts Set Free. Up until I became a Christian, I had all of the arrogant narcissism of atheist Tim Faber, a T.V. producer intent on proving that mankind has no need of God. I also have the questioning spirit of David Gold, a Bible-school dropout turned boxer who is led by the Lord to become a heroic pastor, and of young Luke Noongwook, a native Alaskan who goes on a quest to find his missing father. Their need to understand difficult aspects of Scripture are based on a passionate desire to love God with all their heart and strength and soul and mind. As is mine!
As a young man, I’d been greatly impressed by E.L. Doctorow’s novel Ragtime, which blended fictional and historical characters, and I decided to use the same approach in Hearts Set Free. Parts of the novel are set in the early and mid-1900s (especially the 1930s), and Jack Johnson, the first black heavyweight champion of the world, and Georges Lemaitre, who was both a physicist and a priest—a man who corrected Albert Einstein, and is probably the greatest scientist of whom most people have never heard!—play important roles.
Finally, the novel is tribute to the beauty of Scripture and features many quotes from the Psalms. If you love compelling tales that combine mystery, adventure, and romance, and enjoy thinking deeply about your faith, I think you’ll find it’s just the book for you!
Blog Stops
Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations, February 20
For the Love of Literature, February 21
Artistic Nobody, February 22 (Author Interview)
Texas Book-aholic, February 23
Older & Smarter?, February 24
Inklings and notions, February 25
A Baker’s Perspective, February 26 (Author Interview)
For Him and My Family, February 27
deb’s Book Review, February 28
Christian Bookshelf Reviews, February 29 (Author Interview)
Truth and Grace Homeschool Academy, March 1
Godly Book Reviews, March 2
Through the Fire Blogs, March 3 (Author Interview)
Locks, Hooks and Books, March 4
Giveaway
To celebrate his tour, Jess is giving away the grand prize package of an autographed copy of Hearts Set Free plus a $50 Amazon gift card!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for nine extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.
5 comments:
I want to see what happened in Las Vegas and how it ended.
Good to know about the bad language...that's something that bothers me too.
Debbie, Thank you for the cursing warning. I feel that it has no place in Christian fiction.
This book sounds like a fascinating read!
Thanks for your thoughtful review. I was also put off by some of the language.
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