• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Lots of Helpers

Our family's life in New Zealand

  • Home
  • Our Library
  • Math Freebie
  • Contact Us
  • Legal Policies
    • Disclosure and Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy

Book Review–Winds of Ruach

January 31, 2024 by NZ Filbruns 3 Comments

About the Book:

Book: Winds of Ruach

Author: D.M. Griffin

Genre: Biblical Fiction

Release Date: October 18, 2022

Winds of Ruach is a compilation of five novellas fictionally traversing a period in Israel’s history that spans three hundred years. God used the prophets to speak to His people during a tumultuous time when faith was challenged and spiritual discipline was necessary. Five prophets lived out the message of God in a way that girded their faith and inspired those who truly listened to God’s voice. Jonah, Nahum, Habakkuk, Obadiah, and Malachi were God’s chosen spokesmen.

Book One: Jonah felt he had every right to be angry when tragedy struck his household. He would soon learn that anger was a barrier to a right relationship with God no matter how justified the source of that anger. What happens when Jonah realizes that his deep-seated anger might cost him everything? Will he learn to embrace his forgiving God?

Book Two: Nahum was a victim of God’s wrath as it fell on the land of rebellious Israel. Intimidated for the majority of his life with little memory about his origin, Nahum struggles to trust God for vindication. Grappling to understand why everything keeps going wrong, will Nahum surrender to the only One who can truly defend him?

Book Three: As a child, Habakkuk’s faith was pure and unadulterated. As a priest serving in the Temple, however, Habakkuk realizes that something is keeping him from experiencing the fullness of that faith. He doesn’t truly trust God’s heart toward him. Will he learn to be brave despite the circumstances that threaten the very existence of the Temple?

Book Four: Obadiah lived in two worlds while feeling as if he spiritually belonged to one. Born to an Edomite father and Jewish mother, he was constantly at war with his brother. How long would it take for Obadiah to learn that the Lord was with him in the battle? Even if he lost it all, would having God be enough?

Book Five: Malachi wrestles with what he knows to be true about God and how his life is unfolding in contrast to that knowledge. What does it mean to worship with a pure heart, not with ulterior motives? As God has the final say with His people, will they listen and faithfully wait for the promised future of redemption?

Explore the themes woven into the books of the minor prophets through these fictional journeys that reveal how mighty the Winds of Ruach (Spirit) truly are as they blow across history into today.

My Thoughts:

The cover first caught my eye when I saw Winds of Ruach offered for review. I tend to look for books that are not straight-up romance, and those are fairly easy to spot most of the time, just from the cover. With this one, it was easy to see that it was historical, so I read the description. That really caught my attention, so I signed up for it. When I sign up for tours with CelebrateLit, they send me a digital copy of the book, as well as a physical copy; the print book is sent to my mom because it costs too much to send it here. Mom holds the books for me until there is a way to get them to us in someone’s suitcase. When this book arrived, she texted me that it was quite big. Just my kind of book! I was a little apprehensive about what she would have to say about it, since she reads all the books I have sent to her, and I really didn’t know if she would enjoy this one. What a relief when I talked to her after she had read the first two novellas and enjoyed them! That made me think I would like this book, as well.

I really appreciated D. M. Griffin’s imagination of what life may have been like for five men whom we know next to nothing about. She has obviously done a lot of research into life in Ancient Israel; almost everything rang true with what I have read from other sources. Human nature being as it is, I can sure see those prophets acting the way she portrays them—I especially saw myself in Jonah and his struggle to obey God! I think that one and the one about Habakkuk were my favorites. The story about Obadiah struck me as rather melodramatic (my mom called it anachronistic), and the way the major conflict was resolved in the story of Malachi felt too perfect. Otherwise, though, I loved his story and how he tried to maintain pure worship of God in an apostate culture. 

I will have to mention, though, that some of the word choices in Winds of Ruach jarred me a bit. Several times, guards would “parole” an area, and there were a few other words here and there, sometimes repeatedly, that sounded wrong. 

There were, however, so many gems in the story that I loved it despite its need for more proofreading. In the section about Jonah, an Assyrian soldier is quoted as saying, “Yours is a God who extends an invitation to life while our gods only threaten and taunt with death.” Wow! What a contrast. Or a couple of chapters on, Jonah is admonished, “Jonah, do not love God for what He gives you. Love Him for who He is.” Then there is the passage in Nahum’s story: “Yahweh didn’t understand His people’s pressing concern. If Yahweh knew the details, then His Word would be adjusted. If Yahweh knew what was happening now, He would see the foolishness of council given in the past.” Ouch! I know I tend to think that way at times. Wrong! How about this sentence, from the part about Habakkuk? “The Lord owed them nothing. They owed Him everything.” Good reminder! 

In almost every chapter, all through the book, are quotes from various parts of the Bible. Most of them, of course, are from the Old Testament, but some are from the New. All are footnoted. At the end of the book are group discussion questions for all the stories. I found these helpful for thinking more deeply about each story and how it relates to my life. Winds of Ruach would be a good book for a group to read and discuss together. There is so much in each chapter about God and how He wants a relationship with us!

I recently read all eight of Lynn Austin’s books about Hezekiah and his son Manasseh, and the return to Jerusalem after the captivity and the rebuilding of Jerusalem, and Winds of Ruach felt like a great companion to those books. I would say that both men and women would enjoy this book; I’ll recommend that my sons listen to it if there is an audiobook of it.

WARNING: Jonah Prologue: Woman brutally killed by Assyrians. Chapter 1: Woman dismembered, baby killed, man’s leg cut off. Chapter 3: Man going after women, caught with a married woman. Nahum Chapter 1: Prostitute tries to get a man to be with her. Chapter 3: Man beaten up. Chapter 5: Attempted rape, man knocked out, kiss. Chapter 6: Man knocked out, beaten up. Chapter 8: Man knocked out. Obadiah Chapter 4: Woman bitten by snake. Chapter 9: People shot with arrows. Malachi Chapter 5: Man beaten up. 

I received a review copy of this book from the author, and these are my honest thoughts about it. Links may be affiliate links, which will benefit Esther’s website if purchases are made through them.

About the Author:

D.M. Griffin currently resides in Northern California with her husband. They met in middle school a few days after she was transplanted to the West Coast at the tender age of twelve. She has three adult children who have been an endless source of delight and inspiration. She also has a precious new grandchild who brings her joy.

As a native New Hampshire girl, she fondly remembers spending her summers there as a child. Thick accents, small towns, and fascinating weather stirred the imagination of her young heart. She has always had a fondness for stories thanks to her imaginative mother who would make up wild, adventurous tales to tell her while tucking her into bed as a child.

She truly believes that a book that sits on a shelf unread is like a planted seed that never blossoms. Nothing delights her more than sharing a story.

More from D M:

I am a creature of habit who thrives on predictability. That being said, Winds of Ruach fell outside my comfort zone. If you have ever heard the phrase – if you want to make God laugh, tell him your plans – you get the idea. I was deep in the throes of researching and writing a twelve-book series on the disciples of Jesus. My schedule was set. The routine was fixed. I had spent two years dedicated to The Follower Series. In between writing the first draft of book seven and editing book one, I was divinely halted. I didn’t exactly hit a block, so to speak. Instead, I was inspirationally diverted. It frustrated me for a short time.

Looking back on it now, I realize it was a blessing in disguise. At the time, my daily bible reading took me through the book of Jonah. Jonah 4:4 snagged my attention like a burr clinging to a pant leg. “Is it right for you to be angry?”  That single phrase snared my heart with a compulsion to self-reflect. That meditation took me to places I had not been before. I followed the thread of anger woven throughout my life. Not the anger that manifests itself in hot, fiery outbursts but the hidden, silent anger that can turn into deadly pride or unrecognizable prejudice.

Anger wears many disguises. Some of those are loneliness and grief. I began wondering what might have happened in Jonah’s life to make him, a man of God, so angry that he would directly and blatantly disobey the Lord. The first short story was the beginning of a five-month diversion in my predetermined writing schedule.

I was inspired by other verses as I walked the landscape of Scripture through the books of the minor prophets.

With Nahum, I pondered how tragedy affects the trajectory of a life. With Habakkuk, I explored the difference between authentic worship and disingenuous faith. Obadiah is a short and sweet book of the bible, but it packs a punch. The theme of the resulting short story is about claiming one’s true identity as a child of God. Finally, Malachi wove the final thread into the fabric of this anthology which is ultimately about the Spirit of God moving through history to accomplish His will and purpose. Malachi is a story about knowing when to remain silent and when to ask questions of God. As I wrote Winds of Ruach, I thought about the importance of destiny and promise.

Some of my early readers asked me which was my favorite prophet. Honestly, the only way I could answer that question is to say that it is whichever story I am reading at the time. I was greatly blessed while writing Winds of Ruach, drawing out biblical themes I had never noticed before. These five prophets are near and dear to my heart. Truly, the imagination is a gift from God. And yes, I did go back to the ‘routine’ in writing. It took three and half years (half a year over my schedule) but the series I was working on prior to Winds of Ruach is now complete. God is good even in the distractions.

To purchase your copy, click here.

To visit more of the blog stops on this tour, click here.

To enter a fun giveaway, click here.

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: Book Review, CelebrateLit

Garden–December 2023

January 28, 2024 by NZ Filbruns Leave a Comment

I didn’t take very many pictures of the garden in December. I spent an hour one morning talking to my sister on the phone while I weeded this patch. That was a great way to pass the time while doing a job like this!

The entire bed before I finished…

…and after the weeding was finished and I mulched it.

One of the children took a picture of these roses by the house.

They also got a close-up of some of the strawberries!

While I was working in the garden one hot afternoon, the children had a waterfight with the neighbor, using his water guns, which he offered them the use of. It was pretty funny to watch!

I took this video the second week of January.

Filed Under: Activities at Home Tagged With: Garden, Homesteading

Four Wheel Drive Trip

January 24, 2024 by NZ Filbruns Leave a Comment

Some friends came to visit over New Year’s, and they and our boys went on a couple of four wheel drive trips. Here they are taking off on the first one, somewhere around Reefton.

A few days later they went up Napoleon Hill. Simon was able to go along on that one, and Esther rode with him and documented it.

I put several video clips together. The first is from the first trip; the rest are from the other. The last two show Elijah stuck in the mud and pulling himself out with his winch.

Filed Under: Away From Home Tagged With: Four Wheel Driving, West Coast

Christmas 2023

January 21, 2024 by NZ Filbruns Leave a Comment

For Christmas this year, we decided to go to Punakaiki and walk the Porariro River track. Some people wanted to go to the beach, but more of us wanted to do a bush walk, and this is the one that was chosen. We got there in time to eat our picnic lunch. Because it had been raining, the ground was quite wet, and of course we had forgotten our camping chairs, so we sat on the inner tubes the boys had taken along. That got pretty funny; the four boys who sat on one figured out that they could bounce in rhythm! I tried to get a video of it, but they always stopped as soon as I picked up the camera!

This is a twig that one of the children brought me.

Have a close look at how Simon parked. He was “trying to park beside us.”

The river was in flood; Esther said it was about two feet higher than the other time she walked this track. It was gorgeous!

I saw grooves on the underside of this rock from when they blasted it to form the track.

I’ve never noticed a bud on a Nikau Palm before. It’s huge!

I think this was a tree that fell over and an arch was formed for the track to go through. Gayle wanted a picture of me inside it!

The children all reached the swing bridge ahead of Gayle and I. Of course, James was bored and had to find ways to entertain himself and everyone else. This is what we saw!

We missed this. Esther captured this shot before we got there.

He quickly scooted down when we arrived–the same way he got up!

On the way back, Esther and I walked together. Gayle must have caught this picture of us going across the bridge. Everyone except the three of us walked back on a different track; we returned to the vehicles and drove around to pick them up.

I got a picture of this weka while it very busily searched for worms among the dead leaves.

As always, we enjoyed our day, and headed home quite tired. However, the boys dove right in to working on the barrel boat again!

Filed Under: Away From Home Tagged With: Christmas, Punakaiki, West Coast

December 2023 Photos

January 17, 2024 by NZ Filbruns 1 Comment

Here are the rest of the pictures from December! James worked on his sleepout for the first two days of the Christmas holidays. He and Mr. Sweetie got all the walls framed up.

Miss Joy busy doing school!

Elijah grew a beard for a couple of months. I got a picture of him just before he took it off.

The younger boys built this bike ramp and had a lot of fun doing jumps and taking pictures of it.

We’ve been enjoying watching the birds on the flax blossoms outside our windows. This is a tui; we have also see a bellbird and a lot of starlings.

We had a lot of rain the last couple of days of December, so the afternoon of the 31st, the girls and I walked down to look at the river. It had already gone down several inches.

Esther got the game Ticket to Ride, and we spent a lot of time playing it.

She’s a bookworm already!

Esther has been making masa, and Miss Joy helped her grind it one day, and then played in the moist dough.

Filed Under: Activities at Home Tagged With: Random Photos

Kayaking

January 14, 2024 by NZ Filbruns 2 Comments

It all started the day we went to a baptism in Waipara. After the baptism and a shared picnic, someone brought a trailer load full of kayaks. The boys played in them all afternoon. That triggered a renewed interest in boating.

As soon as James had a rainy day for an excuse not to work on building his sleepout, he started building a barrel boat. It happened to be the day Simon came home before breakfast for his days off, and without even coming in the house to say hello to me he was busy cutting barrels open! Several days of work later, with the help of a friend who came over several times, they had the project finished!

Of course, the boat had to be tried out! They only had time that evening to float a short distance on the river, and it rained so much overnight that the river wasn’t safe the next day. However, Nelson Creek was in flood, so they decided to try the boat out on that! Nelson Creek is too shallow normally to get the boat down, but in flood there is enough water. So, they went from church back to our house to load up the boat, our boys’ two kayaks and James’s boss’s kayak, and came back to get another friend’s kayak, and headed to Nelson Creek to jump off.

Several days later, they took the barrel boat and several canoes down the Grey River from the Ahaura Bridge to Ngahere. Esther walked down to the river with them to bring our ute home; they had left a vehicle and trailer at the point where they planned to pull out. They packed a lunch to eat along the way, and had a great time–although two people who normally wear long pants got very sunburned legs!

Today, some of the boys stopped at a yard sale and bought two more kayaks! This will be the summer of boating, I have a feeling.

Filed Under: Away From Home Tagged With: Ahaura River, Boating, West Coast

Book Review–New Chicks at the Peaceable

January 10, 2024 by NZ Filbruns 2 Comments

About the Book:

Book: New Chicks at The Peaceable

Author: Caryl “Grami” McAdoo

Genre: Children’s Animals Picture Book

Release Date: November 23, 2023

Chickens from newborns to old hens have a “pecking order” but bullying is never right! What to do if you’re bullied by those around you!

My Thoughts:

My little girls enjoyed this story. They loved the pictures; we happened to read it on a day that we had chicks of our own hatching in the incubator, so they could really relate to it. On the other hand, I found it hard to read because there were typos on almost every page. I also struggled a bit with having the story chopped up with the author’s personal notes to the reader in between bits of the story. On the last page of the story, she talks to children about how they don’t have to be afraid of anything because God takes care of them. This would be a good book for children who have a lot of fears, or for little people who love chickens. The photography is beautiful!

I received a complimentary copy of this book from CelebrateLit, and these are my honest thoughts about it.

I received a review copy of this book from the author, and these are my honest thoughts about it. Links may be affiliate links, which will benefit Esther’s website if purchases are made through them.

About the Author:


Award-winning, Christian author Caryl McAdoo prays her story brings God glory. Of her best-selling novels, readers love her historical Christian romance family sagas most, but also enjoy their contemporary cousins, Caryl’s Biblical fiction, her new historical mystery series, and tales for young adults and mid-grade booklovers as well as the new picture books for the still younger set. The majority of reviewers award her stories five-stars and praise Caryl’s writing style and the depth of her characters, feeling as though they get to know them well.

The prolific writer loves singing the new songs God gives her almost as much as penning new novels—hear a few at YouTube! She’s been married to Ron fifty-five years, and they share four children and twenty-seven grandsugars. The McAdoos live at The Peaceable in the woods south of Clarksville, seat of Red River County in far Northeast Texas, waiting expectantly for God to open the next door.

More from Caryl:

As the chicken population grows at The Peaceable Farm & Bookery, troubles come–all based all on the true story! One of our beautiful ‘Golden Laced Wyandotte’ hens got broody and wanted to sit on a nest and hatch a clutch of chicks!

The wee peepers, designated the “Songsters” and named Reba, Celine, Loretta, and Miley (the last by a reader’s daughter), experience the famous and proverbial “pecking order” chickens are so famous for. In human terms that can be called bullying though, and so Goldie, their mother teaches the girls how to respond those bully chickens!

Grami loves her “backyard birds”, and so does O’Pa! She expects the name of the twenty acres she and O’Pa live on in Red River County—The Peaceable—to be the spur for all its inhabitants to cohabitate peacefully with one another—and that includes the chickens!

She and O’Pa, her husband of fifty-five years have bought an incubator to hatch purebred chicks then raise fine, healthy birds to their laying age—usually four to five months—before finding them forever homes. We love our flock, and the babies grow so fast. Watching them is so much fun and relaxing, too!

Grami knows each hen and rooster by name, and they all are so affectionate! They come running whenever I head out the door (mostly because they want to see if I brought any food! ) I love thinking about what they are saying to each other with all their clucking and purring and cackling!

This is why the books are partially written from the hens’ point of view as our first animals’ series, The River Bottom Ranch Stories featuring horses and goats and dogs among other wild animal characters. And all those farm animals were real ones that we owned and loved, too—like the chickens!

This series ‘Grami’s Stories for Children’ also has a narrator speaking throughout—that’s me, Grami McAdoo! I talk to the children through a few pages full of dialogue to teach them about poultry and things of God. In NEW CHICKS at the Peaceable, I talk about bullies and how Jesus teaches us to respond, how they can be scary, but God is always with us and sends His angels to protect us!

The illustrations are photographs of our real chickens and The Peaceable Farm & Bookery. In the back of the book, there are a few pages of “Chicken Terminology” and fun “Chicken Facts” to teach the little ones more about the wonderful world of chickens!

I pray the precious little ones so dear to God’s heart will love the story and be blessed by it! 

To purchase your copy, click here.

To visit more of the blog stops on this tour, click here.

To enter a fun giveaway, click here.

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: Book Review, CelebrateLit

Hatching

January 7, 2024 by NZ Filbruns Leave a Comment

We bought a new incubator a couple of months ago, when the old one we were given quit working. So far, we have used it for two batches of eggs. Our first batch, which started with 56 eggs, gave us 35 chicks. Hatch day was very exciting! This was the first one to hatch. The poor thing had a few hours with no company, and was very lonely.

That evening, we took all the babies out of the incubator; there were already 24 of them!

The next morning we moved all 35 out to the brooder.

About a week later, we started the incubator again, with a fresh batch of 56 eggs. Princess decided this was a great place to sleep; it was nice and warm! However, she must have pushed the lid a little, and that messed with the turning mechanism. We had to make Princess stop sleeping there.

These eggs are hatching tonight; so far, we have 16 chicks out of the 55 that we left after candling the 56 we started with. The first lot moved outside into a pen on the grass yesterday. There were 34 of them left; a cat pulled one through a crack in the side of the coop one day and had a snack. We patched up the crack. This picture shows what I saw one day this week when I opened the door:

Filed Under: Activities at Home Tagged With: Chickens, Homesteading

Cross Country

January 7, 2024 by NZ Filbruns Leave a Comment

On the first Thursday of December, one of the moms in our homeschool group organized a cross country meet. Quite a few families from the region came, some driving 45 minutes from one direction and others coming an hour from the opposite direction. The children were divided into age groups; the youngest ran one kilometer, the middles (including Little Miss) ran two, and the older ones (including my two school-age boys) ran three kilometers. Part of their route ran through the bush, and I was stationed, with Miss Joy, at a fork in the trail just at the bottom of these steps, at the end of the swing bridge. Miss Joy was quite bored for awhile as we waited for the runners to reach us.

Then they came! Mr. Sweetie and Mr. Imagination stuck together through the race.

I had given my camera to a friend who stayed at the finish line, and she got pictures of my children completing the race.

After the races there were athletic events. The only one I got a picture of was the shot-put, but they also got to throw a discus, do a long jump, and do sprints. This is Little Miss doing the shot-put. All the children had great fun that day!

Filed Under: Away From Home Tagged With: Homeschooling, Nelson Creek, West Coast

November 2023 Photos

December 31, 2023 by NZ Filbruns Leave a Comment

Here are the last of the pictures we took in November! We went to Canterbury to visit friends early in the month, and Mr. Imagination and his friend went hunting. They were pretty pleased with themselves!

Miss Joy was worn out on the way home. She fell asleep a few minutes after leaving, and slept most of the three hours home. Little Miss pretended to be asleep, but she never actually dropped off.

The children found this toy truck at the dump, their favorite “shop.” They got their big brothers to help bring it home, and then Mr. Imagination replaced the motor with one from a lawn mower, and got it running. They had great fun driving it around for a couple of weeks, and then broke something. Simon took it up to his house to do something with it.

Simon and Elijah went hunting one night and Mr. Imagination went with them. They were pretty excited to get this deer! It was a young hind, so very tender.

While Esther and I were cutting up the deer, I asked Miss Joy to peel some carrots for the next day’s soup. She got one or two peeled, then got distracted eating them!

One Sunday afternoon, Miss Joy was having fun spinning around. She wanted me to get a picture of her dress swirling out, so I did, and took a few seconds of video footage, too.

We got to go on a field trip to Shantytown, a historical village close to us. We had a short lesson about using native plants for food and medicine, then went on a brief bush walk, collecting leaves. Then, we investigated the leaves, learning what we could from observing them.

We also got to watch a demonstration of sluicing, a method for mining gold that was used in the Gold Rush days.

We put 56 eggs in our new incubator.

We found the cat cuddled up to the incubator one evening!

Filed Under: Activities at Home Tagged With: Random Photos, Video, West Coast

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 20
  • Page 21
  • Page 22
  • Page 23
  • Page 24
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 131
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

  • RSS Feed
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Goodreads

Recent Posts

  • Kiwi Chick, Blackball, Brunner Mine
  • Pancake Rocks
  • New in the Library! April 2026
  • Jim’s Hut
  • Franz Josef

Archives

Disclosure

Some links on this site are affiliate links.

Subscribe to the Blog

/* real people should not fill this in and expect good things - do not remove this or risk form bot signups */

Intuit Mailchimp

The Family:


Dad and Mom (Gayle and Emma)

Girl #1, Esther, my right hand

Boy #1, Seth (Mr. Handyman)

Boy #2, Simon (Mr. Inventor)

Boy #3, Mr. Intellectual

Boy #4, Mr. Diligence

Boy #5, Mr. Sweetie

Boy #6, Mr. Imagination

Girl #2, Little Miss

Girl #3, Miss Joy

Book Reviews Website

IgniteLit

COPYRIGHT © 2026 · TWENTY SEVEN PRO ON GENESIS FRAMEWORK · DISCLOSURE & DISCLAIMER · PRIVACY POLICY