Crucible (Left Behind Military #2) by Mel Odom Paperback Book

Details

Rent Crucible (Left Behind Military #2)

Author: Mel Odom

Narrator: Steve Sever

Format: Unabridged-CD

Publisher: Tyndale House Pub

Published: Apr 2004

Genre: Fiction - Religious

Retail Price: $38.99

Discs: 13

Synopsis

Danger and personal crisis on land, sea and in the air combine with a level of spiritual warfare that is unparalleled in a Christian book. 'Crucible' is a page-turning thriller that runs side-by-side with the phenomenal Left Behind series. Unabridged. 13 CDs.

View descriptions at Amazon.com

Recommended

Light from Heaven...
by Jan Karon

A final volume in the popular Mitford Years series finds Father Tim contemplating the revival of a remote mountaintop church, a challenge he hopes...

The Last Sacrifice (The...
by Hank Hanegraaff

Rescued from a brutal death, legendary warrior Gallus Sergius Vitas is given a mysterious scroll that is the key to his destiny, but Helius, Nero's...

The Rapture; Countdown to...
by Jerry B. Jenkins

In the moments leading up to the Rapture, nobody knows it is coming as the clock silently ticks down. Choices are made. The stage is set as Nicolae...

Night Light (Restoration...
by Terri Blackstock

When an unexplained crisis sweeps out all of the electronics on the planet, the Brannings are faced with a choice--hoard their possessions to survive...

The Last Disciple
by Hank Hanegraaff

First-century Jerusalem begins to experience the prophecies of Revelation, and, fearing the beginnings of the last days, attempt to decipher the code...

Kingdom Come: The Final...
by Tim LaHaye

In the final chapter of the Left Behind saga, the horrors of the Tribulation are over and Jesus Christ has set up his perfect kingdom on earth, but as...

Reviews

BookLender review by Jeff on 2007-04-17 17:26:25

This is the second book by Mel Odom that I tried to get through. They are the only books I've never been able to complete. The reason I can't finish them? The langage is overly intense. He could make picking up a cup of coffee sound like a monumentous task frought with tormenting emotional turmoil. With every scene filled with such skyrocketing adjectives they loose their power and, to me, become laughable. I suppose if you love the 'end of the world' genre like the Left Behind you may read it for the topic. While I don't agree with the theology (I think Christians will likely go through the tribulation) the reason I couldn't finish it was because of the writing.