David R. Mains
Author of Tales of the Kingdom
About the Author
Disambiguation Notice:
David R(andall) Mains
Series
Works by David R. Mains
Kingdom Tales Trilogy (Tales of the Kingdom, Tales of the Resistance and Tales of the Restoration), SET of 3 (2008) 13 copies
The Sermon Sucking Black Hole: Why You Can't Remember on Monday What Your Minister Preached on Sunday (Morgan James Faith) (2015) 11 copies
Family Traditions 1 copy
sense of his presence, The 1 copy
Just a closer walk with God/ 1 copy
Beloved Son, The 1 copy
Is Revival Near? 1 copy
50 Days to Welcome Christ to Our Church: Adult Journal for the 50-Day Adventure Series (1990) 1 copy
We Will Glorify 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1936-08-06
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Wheaton College (B.A., 1958)
- Organizations
- Chapel of the Air Ministries
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Aurora, Illinois, USA
- Places of residence
- Chicago, Illinois, USA
- Disambiguation notice
- David R(andall) Mains
- Associated Place (for map)
- Illinois, USA
Members
Reviews
I bought this book after hearing David Mains read the chapter on Amanda and the dragon. I read it to my boys — one chapter each night — when they were in grammar school and they liked it so much they clamored for me to read the next chapter right then and there. As a result I also bought the other two in the series. While aimed primarily at children, adults will also find it interesting, captivating, and beneficial.The stories are allegorical and show children not only the consequences show more of wrong-doing but also of redemption and restoration. I cannot recommend it highly enough. show less
These are special. Darker than you would expect for Christian fantasy, but with deeper meaning than some of the trite Christian pap that is out there for children to read. Definitely still relevant for adults, but I would advise parents with young children to glance through these before launching into reading them out loud, and certainly before handing them over to early readers. This is not in the least to say that children should not read these. I love them, and used them with my children. show more But they have some potential nightmare-producing scenes, and I recommend that parents be aware of that from the outset, and judge for themselves whether their children are ready. This series is probably best read in order, and this is Book 2 of the 3. show less
Tales of the Kingdom by David & Karen Mains is an allegorical story about characters who live in a magical world with badguys and goodguys. I have vague memories of hearing this book as a child, and I I recall thinking it was rather interesting, though I didn't remember a lot about it.
As a story it is an interesting tale of girls and boys who find refuge in the forest with the exiled King. Different lessons are learned by various unique characters, who all find a place in the Kingdom. There show more are creepy bad guys, like the Enchanter and the Burners and Naysayers. The book tells stories about individual people in the various chapters, switching back and forth between some, and introducing new characters in others. They ultimately fit together very well as an overall story. There is the girl named Dirty, who loved being dirty and lived with the pigs, but comes to realize her horrible situation and wants to be clean. There is the boy named Scarboy (later Hero) who has a hard time coming to grips with his usefulness while thinking that the scar on his face is an impediment. There is a princess named Amanda, one of whose skills is spitting with great accuracy. Kind of a strange thing…. There are even stranger characters as well. Perhaps the weirdest of all is the Ranger Commander who is also the "Caretaker" who makes flowers and things grow. Think of a hippy who is not opposed to war.
I need to offer a bit of critique of this book. First, some of the things that happened make me a bit uncomfortable. For instance, in one place, while the girl Amanda's burn wounds are being cared for (think dragon), the boy, almost a man, Hero is watching. I didn't feel comfortable with that as it mentioned that her clothes had been taken off to care for the wounds. I don't think that it was meant to be erotic at all but just the concept itself was not decent.
And another thing, If it weren’t meant to be a Christian allegory, I would probably have liked the book more overall, but it is supposed to be Christian allegory. There are some odd symbolisms that I don't quite understand but My main problem is the portrayal of the King (who seems to represent Christ). At times he seems serious, but then at others he seems like some sort of happy-go-lucky guy. Let me quote an example, The King is talking to one of the main children of this story, and he says, "'Can you do this?' He sprang onto his hands and balanced his feet in the air as he moved across the grass. Hero hadn't spent all afternoon on the practice field for nothing. He lifted his hands above his head, then went down to the ground with his feet in the air. He walked around awkwardly until he faced the peasant. They looked at each other upside down." That is not the way Jesus is portrayed in the New Testament. Also, toward the end, a girl who had been rebellious is now coming back but is afraid of how the king will receive her. "The King folded the weeping child into his arms. "Don't leave me, Amanda,' he whispered, 'We've all been so lonely without you.' That is not accurate either, God is not lonely for humans, and not lonely in general (The Father, Son and Holy Spirit do not need company). He does not need us, and does not lack anything that we can give Him (otherwise, He wouldn't be God). The loneliest moment, and probably the only lonely moment Jesus has ever had was, not when His disciples forsook Him, but when the Father did so.
But if you just look on it as a story, not an allegory, then it's okay and just an adventure (though it's kind of hard to do that when the king says as a battle cry, speaking of his father, "To the Emperor of All! To the One Who Always Is!". But one could change that while reading it out loud.
The pictures are interesting, I would have enjoyed studying them as a kid, though some are pretty weird. My little brother loved the picture of Amanda and the Dragon, because he really likes dragons and this one is illustrated well. He kept asking if he could look at the book, just to examine the dragon picture some more.
It would work well as a bedtime story, if you can get your kids to only listen to one or two stories. It is adventurous and well written. If a little odd.
Many thanks to the folks at BookCrash for working with the publisher to provide me with a complimentary review copy of this book! (My review did not have to be favorable) show less
As a story it is an interesting tale of girls and boys who find refuge in the forest with the exiled King. Different lessons are learned by various unique characters, who all find a place in the Kingdom. There show more are creepy bad guys, like the Enchanter and the Burners and Naysayers. The book tells stories about individual people in the various chapters, switching back and forth between some, and introducing new characters in others. They ultimately fit together very well as an overall story. There is the girl named Dirty, who loved being dirty and lived with the pigs, but comes to realize her horrible situation and wants to be clean. There is the boy named Scarboy (later Hero) who has a hard time coming to grips with his usefulness while thinking that the scar on his face is an impediment. There is a princess named Amanda, one of whose skills is spitting with great accuracy. Kind of a strange thing…. There are even stranger characters as well. Perhaps the weirdest of all is the Ranger Commander who is also the "Caretaker" who makes flowers and things grow. Think of a hippy who is not opposed to war.
I need to offer a bit of critique of this book. First, some of the things that happened make me a bit uncomfortable. For instance, in one place, while the girl Amanda's burn wounds are being cared for (think dragon), the boy, almost a man, Hero is watching. I didn't feel comfortable with that as it mentioned that her clothes had been taken off to care for the wounds. I don't think that it was meant to be erotic at all but just the concept itself was not decent.
And another thing, If it weren’t meant to be a Christian allegory, I would probably have liked the book more overall, but it is supposed to be Christian allegory. There are some odd symbolisms that I don't quite understand but My main problem is the portrayal of the King (who seems to represent Christ). At times he seems serious, but then at others he seems like some sort of happy-go-lucky guy. Let me quote an example, The King is talking to one of the main children of this story, and he says, "'Can you do this?' He sprang onto his hands and balanced his feet in the air as he moved across the grass. Hero hadn't spent all afternoon on the practice field for nothing. He lifted his hands above his head, then went down to the ground with his feet in the air. He walked around awkwardly until he faced the peasant. They looked at each other upside down." That is not the way Jesus is portrayed in the New Testament. Also, toward the end, a girl who had been rebellious is now coming back but is afraid of how the king will receive her. "The King folded the weeping child into his arms. "Don't leave me, Amanda,' he whispered, 'We've all been so lonely without you.' That is not accurate either, God is not lonely for humans, and not lonely in general (The Father, Son and Holy Spirit do not need company). He does not need us, and does not lack anything that we can give Him (otherwise, He wouldn't be God). The loneliest moment, and probably the only lonely moment Jesus has ever had was, not when His disciples forsook Him, but when the Father did so.
But if you just look on it as a story, not an allegory, then it's okay and just an adventure (though it's kind of hard to do that when the king says as a battle cry, speaking of his father, "To the Emperor of All! To the One Who Always Is!". But one could change that while reading it out loud.
The pictures are interesting, I would have enjoyed studying them as a kid, though some are pretty weird. My little brother loved the picture of Amanda and the Dragon, because he really likes dragons and this one is illustrated well. He kept asking if he could look at the book, just to examine the dragon picture some more.
It would work well as a bedtime story, if you can get your kids to only listen to one or two stories. It is adventurous and well written. If a little odd.
Many thanks to the folks at BookCrash for working with the publisher to provide me with a complimentary review copy of this book! (My review did not have to be favorable) show less
This book provides a vital key to real "connections": learning to ask good questions. Questions that get beyond facts to feelings and beyond feelings to a person's heart. It's a discipline that enables us to touch lives.
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