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The Angel of Bastogne by Gilbert Morris
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The Angel of Bastogne (original 2005; edition 2005)

by Gilbert Morris, J. Landon Ferguson

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In the tradition of It's a Wonderful Life and John Grisham's Skipping Christmas...Newspaper reporter Ben Raines is a full-fledged cynic trying to bypass what he feels is the least wonderful time of the year-Christmas. But his plan to escape on a dream vacation overseas is foiled when the boss assigns him to write the annual front-page holiday story.With a humbug twist, Ben chooses to investigate a World War II legend involving his own father that will expose the fallacies of religion and everything related to December 25th.Willy Raines fought in the Battle of the Bulge at Bastogne during Christmas 1944 and-to Ben's embarrassment-believes a real angel saved the lives of every man in the 101st Airborne unit.Some angel that was. Life was never easy for Willy after the war, and he was far from heroic in his son's eyes. Ben sets out to find other veterans who witnessed the angel of Bastogne, sure to return empty-handed. Instead, he comes home with a heart that is overflowing.

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Member:OSLCStillwater
Title:The Angel of Bastogne
Authors:Gilbert Morris
Other authors:J. Landon Ferguson
Info:B&H Fiction (2005), Hardcover, 156 pages
Collections:Currently reading
Rating:
Tags:1, Fiction

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The Angel of Bastogne by Gilbert Morris (2005)

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  AbneyLibri | Jul 22, 2023 |
I recognized Bastogne as part of World War II,
actually, part of the Battle of the Bulge, so I was interested in a Christmas story involving WWII. I should have known that I'd be disappointed, knowing that Gilbert Morris is a well-known author of Christian fiction.

The Angel of Bastogne actually has a very simple storyline. Willie Raines was a Sergeant at Bastogne on Dec. 25, 1944, and when his small squad of five was pinned down by mortar fire, he saw a Lieutenant who gave him advice. Willie took our the mortar squad, and swore it was an angel who guided him.

But, Willie's son, Ben, had no childhood. Willie's injuries didn't allow him to do much work, and Ben ended up helping in the family newstand. He became a writer for a newspaper, resentful of his father, who was in the Veterans' Hospital. When Ben's planned vacation to Spain was cancelled, he was given the assignment of writing the paper's Christmas story, and he decided to write about his father's squad, planning it to be a cynical piece. It took the daughter of one of the soldiers, and trips to visit the others, to change Ben's opinion of his father, and of Christmas.

It's a simple story, with a tear-jerker ending. My problem with the story was one that many people won't have. I didn't care for the story of Ben's salvation, and the preaching in the book. And, I had never thought of It's a Wonderful Life as a "Godless movie." Loved the WWII angle. I could have lived without the preaching. ( )
  LesaHolstine | Dec 14, 2009 |
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Epigraph
Dedication
I dedicate this book to
three of my family who mean a lot to me.

To Doug Freeman - who fought for us all
in the Real War.
To Jimmy Jordan - a sweet guy and my friend
since we were rug rats.
To Gale Towne - my fellow pilgrim
on the way to the Celestial City.
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A freezing blast of air struck the scrawny ginger-colored squirrel just as he emerged from the hole in the top of the large spruce tree.
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Fiction. Literature. HTML:

In the tradition of It's a Wonderful Life and John Grisham's Skipping Christmas...Newspaper reporter Ben Raines is a full-fledged cynic trying to bypass what he feels is the least wonderful time of the year-Christmas. But his plan to escape on a dream vacation overseas is foiled when the boss assigns him to write the annual front-page holiday story.With a humbug twist, Ben chooses to investigate a World War II legend involving his own father that will expose the fallacies of religion and everything related to December 25th.Willy Raines fought in the Battle of the Bulge at Bastogne during Christmas 1944 and-to Ben's embarrassment-believes a real angel saved the lives of every man in the 101st Airborne unit.Some angel that was. Life was never easy for Willy after the war, and he was far from heroic in his son's eyes. Ben sets out to find other veterans who witnessed the angel of Bastogne, sure to return empty-handed. Instead, he comes home with a heart that is overflowing.

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