Granny's Cove
Six children are at a beach birthday party on San Juan Island, northern Puget Sound, when a freak wave washes them away to a different time. They are in costume, and they end up in their fantasy roles in other island locations. The two "princesses' wash up in Victoria, the two "pirates" wash up on deserted Sucia Island, and the "cowgirl and Indian" remain on the original beach, but they all find themselves washed back to the mid-1800's. They try to find each other, find their way home again, and above all, try to do their best to do the right thing no matter what strange things happen to them. They conquer their fears and learn to deal with pirates, war, and bureaucracy with grace and composure.This is a charming story, in the spirit of Lewis' Narnia series, and Focus on the Family's Adventures in Odyssey. There are flavors of J.K. Rowling and Robert Lewis Stevenson, too.Good character development. They're well drawn, interesting, and mostly believable. Mark SchwingeDr. Paul Chiles earned degrees in chemistry, medicine, and public health at the University of Washington. After working in Papua New Guinea for two years, Paul and his wife, Joyce, moved to San Juan Island in northern Puget Sound. Over the next seventeen years, while practicing medicine and raising two children, they frequently volunteered in mission hospitals around the world.In 1992 they sold the practice and moved to a ranch in south, central Washington State so that they could work more frequently in disaster interventions. Paul and Joyce are often found on opposite sides of the world as they respond to various disasters for Samaritan's Purse. Paul also works part time for the U.S. Government Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance. He has served in more than thirty different countries. Six children are at a beach birthday party on San Juan Island, northern Puget Sound, when a freak wave washes them away to a different time. They are in costume, and they end up in their fantasy roles in other island locations. The two "princesses' wash up in Victoria, the two "pirates" wash up on deserted Sucia Island, and the "cowgirl and Indian" remain on the original beach, but they all find themselves washed back to the mid-1800's. They try to find each other, find their way home again, and above all, try to do their best to do the right thing no matter what strange things happen to them. They conquer their fears and learn to deal with pirates, war, and bureaucracy with grace and composure.This is a charming story, in the spirit of Lewis' Narnia series, and Focus on the Family's Adventures in Odyssey. There are flavors of J.K. Rowling and Robert Lewis Stevenson, too.Good character development. They're well drawn, interesting, and mostly believable. Mark SchwingeDr. Paul Chiles earned degrees in chemistry, medicine, and public health at the University of Washington. After working in Papua New Guinea for two years, Paul and his wife, Joyce, moved to San Juan Island in northern Puget Sound. Over the next seventeen years, while practicing medicine and raising two children, they frequently volunteered in mission hospitals around the world.In 1992 they sold the practice and moved to a ranch in south, central Washington State so that they could work more frequently in disaster interventions. Paul and Joyce are often found on opposite sides of the world as they respond to various disasters for Samaritan's Purse. Paul also works part time for the U.S. Government Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance. He has served in more than thirty different countries. 

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