
Stories for Every Season
This book contains 52 children’s stories; one for each week of the year. Clustered around the four seasons, these stories have been obtained from the Martins’ family and friends. Full of moral themes with many simple lessons so children can understand the meaning. 266 pages; paper.

Stories on Grandma’s Porch
These stories of long ago, written by a grandma who loved children, will delight and teach. Joy, sorrow, selfishness and rewards for obedience are the same now as then, yet the old-time setting makes these stories impressive. To read aloud to young children in the home and at Sunday school, and for young readers to read for themselves. 48 pages; paperback

Stories Worth Rereading
These 73 stories have good lessons and character-building themes for children and youth. There are stories relating incidents in history, missionary efforts, and home and school experiences. These stories will inspire, instruct, and entertain the readers. 328 pages; paper.

Storm Song
As World War II rages on, 1943 is a difficult year for the Yoder family. How should Elam, a conscientious objector, act when he boards a train full of sneering soldiers? Why does Father end up in prison? Thankfully, all things are in God’s power. Book seven in the Amish Frontier Series. 164 pages; paperback.

Suitcases, Schools, and Survival
Join the impulsive and adventurous Stacy once again in this sequel to The Girl with Nine Lives. Stacy is an eighteen-year-old heading off to teach in small, private Christian schools. Her imagination creates many interesting moments with students in and out of the classroom as she teaches academics and shares her love for God. This story includes adventurous times in New Zealand and England. 245 pages; paperback.

Sunny Hour Stories
A teacher offers a prize for the highest score in arithmetic; one boy hides his friend’s papers so he will not win the prize. Includes various other character-building stories. One of the eight books in the set “A Treasury of Stories.” Silhouette style illustrations; 64 pages; paper.

Tabitha at Ivy Hall
Tabitha, motherless and mostly ignored by her father, is constantly getting into scrapes. She starts school at Ivy Hall, but before her first term is over, her father gets hurt. As she nurses him back to health, his heart softens and a joyful time follows as he becomes the father he never was. This is a reprint. Ages 9-14; 198 pages; paperback.

Tabitha’s Glory
Opening day at Ivy Hall is a great bustle of excitement and greeting old friends. But who is that lame, red-haired girl dressed in rags? Glory has a rough time at the school, and everyone else does too until Tabitha begins to show compassion. Other girls follow suit, and another delightful, exciting year unfolds. This reprint is a sequel to “Tabitha at Ivy Hall.” Ages 9-14; 192 pages; paperback.

Teddy’s Tornado
Teddy lived with his mother in little house in Georgia. In the evenings they ate popcorn and played Memory. But one day a tornado tumbled his house and smashed his bike! They lived with a neighbor for a while, and Mommy was sad. But one day they met some Christian people who said they would help them build a new house! 53 pages; hardcover; Christian Light Publications.

The Arctic Adventurer Wilfred Grenfell
As a schoolboy, Wilfred could hardly concentrate on his studies. There was so much to be explored in the outdoors! As he grew to manhood, his love of adventure and endless energy became a great asset. Up and down the coast of Labrador he sailed, stopping at little fishing villages to give medical care and preach the gospel. 135 pages; paper.

The Beggar’s Bible
John Wycliffe is an Oxford professor who has radical ideas—he believes everyone should be able to read the Bible. Young Arnold Hutton hears Wycliffe’s enemies are sending spies to his lectures and encouraging Oxford students to riot in the streets. Will Wycliffe heed the warnings? 135 pages; paper; Herald Press.

The Bible in the Wall
The true story of a man repeatedly rejecting the Bible. God saw fit to bring this same copy of the Bible before him again and again, until he was willing to hear the Word of God and obey. This story is set in Switzerland and northern Italy in the mid-1800s and has been rewritten in children’s language. 61 pages; paper.







