Michael J. Sullivan, Necessary Heartbreak

Michael J. Sullivan, Necessary Heartbreak

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Michael J. Sullivan, Necessary Heartbreak

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Michael J. Sullivan, Necessary Heartbreak
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Harriet Klausner
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Necessary Heartbreak Michael J. Sullivan

Necessary Heartbreak

Michael J. Sullivan

Gallery (Simon & Schuster), Mar 30 2010, $15.00

ISBN: 9781439184233

When his wife died giving birth to their daughter Elizabeth fourteen years ago, Michael Sullivan lost his faith and most of his heart was interred with his spouse. The only person he cherishes is his offspring as he keeps everyone else at a distance.

One day when the father and daughter are carrying crates into their church, they find a trap door in the sub-basement. Unable to resist, they enter and begin walking a long tunnel. When they finally exit, the duo find themselves in Jerusalem one week before the execution of Christ.

Initially the time travels assume they stumbled into an incredible movie set, but soon realize otherwise when they observe a Roman soldier harming a man. They intercede only to have Mike incarcerated in the same prison as the person he tried to liberate. Another Roman soldier helps Mike escape, but later learns he wants something from him: Elizabeth. The man blocks the entrance to the tunnel forcing the Sullivan duet to remain in first century Jerusalem. Leah, who believes Mike should know her, provides food and shelter. As attraction between her and Mike grows but they know he and his child do not belong there. Leah is willing to sacrifice herself if needed to enable the love of her life and his daughter to go home.

Michael J. Sullivan has written an exciting refreshing biblical thriller in which his namesake hero meets Jesus who prophesized his coming and a who's who of the final days. The story line adheres to the Bible yet provides a secular spin with no preaching. Readers will enjoy this fine tale of two people displaced in time and place; people who have a role as frustrated watchers of the last days of Christ; unable to change what they knows as history.

Harriet Klausner

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