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The Cross Gardener

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
John Bevan believed life was complete. Married to his high school sweetheart and father to a young daughter, John finally had the traditional family he lacked as an orphaned child. But that all disappears when a fatal car accident steals away his wife—and the unborn child she was carrying.
Filled with sorrow, John withdraws from life and love. He erects two small crosses at the scene of his wife’s accident and visits daily, grieving. Then one morning, he encounters a man kneeling before the crosses, touching them up with white paint.
Conversations with the mysterious stranger—known to him only as the Cross Gardener—begin to heal John’s heart. But only when they undertake a journey together does John truly come to see what he must embrace in this world—from the secrets of his own past to the sorrow of his wife’s passing—if he is to start his life anew. And only as the journey ends does John divine who his guide may really be.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 1, 2010
      Author and political commentator Wright (The Wednesday Letters, coauthor with Glenn Beck of The Christmas Sweater) returns with another modern fable that wears its conservative values on its sleeve. Born on the side of the road to a dying teenager, John Bevan grew into happiness and safety on an idyllic Shenandoah Valley orchard, falling in love as a teenager, eventually marrying his high school sweetheart and having a daughter with her. When, pregnant with their second child, his wife dies in a car accident, John finds his faith and ability to function shattered. Attending the site of her death, John encounters the Cross Gardener, a man who tends the roadside memorials of strangers, and with his help John finds himself returning to the path of responsibility and righteousness. This title offers the same kind of values-focused emotionalism that fans expect, with plenty of uplift and tradition-affirming sentiment; even by the standard of his other work, however, this effort is prudish and clunky, and John often comes across as more sullen than bereaved.

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  • English

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