
In My Father’s House, by Corrie Ten Boom
This is the life story of the young Corrie Ten Boom. As she matures, she reaches out to others, helping form girls’ camps for activities and learning about the Lord. Later still, her family takes in children who need a home. Fast paced and alternately humorous and sobering, it makes for interesting reading. 197 pages; paperback. Note: You may be familiar with “The Hiding Place,” a story about how the Ten Boom family sheltered Jews during World War II. This book tells about the years before the war.

Moscow Express and Other Stories from Russia
Moscow Express is the last book written by Georgi Vins before he succumbed to the inoperable tumor that took his life. The manuscript was finished on his deathbed. These true stories, essays, and letters from the author and his fellow countrymen leave a beautiful testimony of courage, faith, and the saving power of Jesus Christ in Communist Russia.

The Gospel in Bonds
This is a true story, written by a Baptist pastor who spent eight years in the Soviet prison camps because of his faith. Enduring difficult conditions among dangerous criminals, Georgi clings to faith in God. All around him are men hungry for the gospel. As the prayers of faithful saints around the world ascend on his behalf the Lord manifests his miraculous power time and again in Georgi’s experiences. 205 pages; paperback.

Trapped in Hitler’s Hell
This is a first-person account of the horrors of living through World War II. It is written by a Jewish girl who is a Christian believer. She chronicles the awfulness of war and the persecution of the Jews. But more than that, she tells of the loving care of her heavenly Father through times of separation from loved ones, camp life, forced labor, and near anarchy after the war. While told sensitively, this book is for mature readers only. 185 pages; paperback.
