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I’ve read Dinner with a Perfect Stranger, Day with a Perfect Stranger and The Next Level by David Gregory and jumped at the chance for a review copy of his newest book. I had a feeling it would be something special. I wasn’t... [Read on]
In Dinner with a Perfect Stranger, we meet Nick, who has dinner with Jesus and becomes convinced of his need for God. In A Day with a Perfect Stranger, we meet his wife Mattie. Mattie is somewhat pleased with the changes she has seen in Nick in... [Read on]
On the heels of reading The Shack, in which a man struggling with his faith gets a written invitation to meet with God, I picked up David Gregory's Dinner with a Perfect Stranger: An Invitation Worth Considering. In spite of the similar set-up... [Read on]
David Gregory's The Last Christian was another pleasant surprise: a Christian novel that is not cheesy, not preachy, but well-written and explicitly Christian. Gregory paints a convincing picture of the not-too-distant future, while weaving a... [Read on]
Artificial Intelligence. Virtual Reality. These are familiar terms now, but what significance will they have in the not-so-distant future? The Last Christian by David Gregory uses these concepts to depict a future United States where... [Read on]
This book is about a successful business man who suddenly finds himself sharing a dinner engagement with Jesus! Skeptical at first, he soon welcomes the opportunity to ask some questions he has long wanted answers to. My family listened to... [Read on]
a work of fiction from the author who brought you Dinner with a Perfect Stranger and The Next Level, neither of which i’ve read, but if you have, then you also have a frame of reference for Gregory’s latest book… the book takes place abou... [Read on]
In this fast paced novel, David Gregory explores the imminently plausible storyline of what 2088 looks like in terms of Christianity in America. In a nutshell: absent. Until Abigail Caldwell emerges from the interior jungles of Papua New Guinea... [Read on]
I must confess, I had trouble with this book at first. After a confusing start, it became interesting, and then collapsed into a bit of confusing. Part of the trouble was that there were several plots, happening all at once, and so it was like... [Read on]
David Gregory’s novel, The Last Christian, is about the future. In this future “tolerance” has come to pass and Christianity no longer exists. Abigail Caldwell grew up in a remote jungle in Papua New Guinea. A disease killed her village, forc... [Read on]