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J. H. Ingraham

Author of The Ten Commandments [1956 film]

51+ Works 904 Members 13 Reviews

About the Author

Works by J. H. Ingraham

The Ten Commandments [1956 film] (1956) — Story — 454 copies, 9 reviews
The Prince of the House of David (1897) 217 copies, 2 reviews
The Pillar of Fire (Rare Collector's Series) (2000) 123 copies, 2 reviews
The Throne of David (2006) 34 copies
The South-west (2011) 8 copies

Associated Works

The Valancourt Book of Victorian Christmas Ghost Stories, Volume 4 (2020) — Contributor — 41 copies, 2 reviews
Library of Southern Literature, Vol. VI: Hearn-Johnston (1909) — Contributor — 7 copies
The Word Lives On: A Treasury of Spiritual Fiction (1951) — Contributor — 3 copies

Tagged

adventure (12) antique (6) Bible (16) Bible Stories (5) Blu-ray (7) Christian (9) Christian fiction (6) Christianity (10) classic (6) classics (5) D&F (6) drama (18) DVD (50) Egypt (10) Exodus (10) fiction (22) film (9) historical (8) historical fiction (13) history (9) Israel (5) Lamplighter (7) Moses (14) movie (14) Old Testament (9) religion (23) religious (5) Ten Commandments (8) VHS (10) video (9)

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Reviews

17 reviews
The life of Moses, skipping most of the stuff in the Bible.

It's an awful movie, but it's a reasonably entertaining sort of awful, with plenty of opportunity for exclaiming "sweet fancy Moses" at the screen. Surprisingly, it took nearly three hours before I started to get bored. I can't figure out what audience it's intended for: it's too preachy for the non-religious, and too grossly inaccurate for the religious.

Concept: C
Story: C
Characters: C
Dialog: F
Pacing: C
Cinematography: D
Special show more effects/design: D
Acting: F
Music: B

Enjoyment: C

GPA: 1.5/4
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½
There's a review on Goodreads that says one of the interesting theological points in this book is the contention that each plague was directed against on of the Egyptians' major gods, showing that Israel's God had the ascendancy. Partly for this reason, I decided to keep the book. Other reviews indicate that it will take a great many pages of (seriously outdated after 160 additional years of archaeological scholarship) ethnological and historical detail to get as far as the plagues, so I show more guess I'm committed to a long term relationship with the book. show less
Recommended to us by our friends Steve and Kathy Mueller, who at one time were representatives for Lamplighter Publishing, this book is Biblical historical fiction in which the story of Moses and the Israelite exodus from Egyptian bondage is told through a series of letters, written primarily by Sesostris, Prince of Tyre, to his mother, Queen Epiphia of Phoenicia, while visiting in Egypt, and then forty years later, by Remeses his son to Sesostris while he too is visiting in Egypt after his show more father has succeeded to the throne. Other than the fictional Prince of Tyre and the obvious “poetic license” needed to fill in the details of the novel, the plot is amazingly true to the Biblical account, with a couple of small exceptions. I do disagree with the author’s assumption that Moses did not learn about his Hebrew heritage until he was around 35. However, it is still a well-written and interesting novel.
J. H. Ingraham (January 26, 1809 – December 18, 1860) was an American author and minister. Born in 1809 at Portland, ME, he spent several years at sea on one of his grandfather’s vessels, and then worked as a teacher of languages in Mississippi, where he began writing. In 1835 he published The Southwest, by a Yankee. The next year Lafitte, the Pirate of the Gulf was issued. Burton; or, The Sieges, a novel of Aaron Burr and Revolutionary Days, appeared in 1838. Novel followed novel in rapid succession so that by 1846 he had written eighty novels. At Natchez, he married Mary Brooks; she was a cousin of Phillips Brooks, who wrote “O Little Town of Bethlehem.” The couple had three daughters and a son. In the 1840's Ingraham published work in Arthur's Magazine and became an Episcopal minister on March 7, 1852. Under the pen-name of F. Clinton Barrington he wrote stories for popular publications like Gleason's Pictorial Drawing-Room Companion. At the age of 51, he died in 1860, at Holly Springs, MS, from an accidental, self-inflicted gunshot wound in the vestibule of his church.
The Pillar of Fire, published just a year before Ingraham’s unfortunate and untimely death, was the third most popular book read in America the day after the Civil War. It is an eloquently-written, illustrative account of the Prince of Tyre during his visit to Egypt more than 3500 years ago. The author brings full color and inspiration to every page in this suspense-filled drama, including flashbacks which explain how Moses came to be raised as the son of Pharaoh’s daughter. It is said to be one of the books that Cecil B. DeMille used as the basis for the plot of his epic film The Ten Commandments starring Charlton Heston as Moses. We did this as a family read aloud, and many were the places where we were able to say, “Aha! We know what is going to happen next.” It is the first in the author's Biblical trilogy, followed by The Throne of David and The Prince of the House of David. Everyone enjoyed it. We have read other excellent Lamplighter reprints of Biblical historical fiction, such as Joel: A Boy of Galilee by Annie Fellows Johnston and Titus: A Comrade of the Cross and Stephen: A Soldier of the Cross both by Florence Morse Kingsley.
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This is an obscure old book about a Jewish girl living in Jerusalem at the time of Jesus's ministry, death, and resurrection. I found it in my parents' attic. The story is told from the perspective of the girl, who never physically meets Jesus, writing to her father about what's happening and ending up becoming a disciple of Christ. Basically the story you read in the Bible told from a new perspective.

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Works
51
Also by
3
Members
904
Popularity
#28,379
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
13
ISBNs
62
Languages
3

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