Spun from Fact
Pansy
Lu par TriciaG





As the title suggests, this story is from real events. As the author explains in the last chapter, all of the events are true; the conversations and other minor elements have been fleshed out by the author.
Jeannie Barrett comes to faith as a girl. That faith is to be tested for more than 20 years, as her health takes a sudden downturn. Added to that, her father, the breadwinner of the family, has a financial setback. It seems to be a case of a 19th-Century female Job! This is an account of her sufferings, but also of her support and provision in Christ.
Jennie Smith's own account is told in The Valley of Baca.- Summary by TriciaG (9 hr 4 min)
Chapitres
It Just Happens | 18:36 | Lu par TriciaG |
Six Years Will Make Changes | 19:00 | Lu par TriciaG |
“I Think Everything is Strange” | 17:47 | Lu par TriciaG |
“Will You?” | 18:15 | Lu par TriciaG |
An Outsider | 18:21 | Lu par TriciaG |
All Excitement | 17:20 | Lu par TriciaG |
“Mother, O Mother!” | 19:56 | Lu par TriciaG |
“Poor Jeanie!” | 20:03 | Lu par TriciaG |
Reuben Perrine Whately | 21:38 | Lu par TriciaG |
“Poor Child, it is Hard!” | 22:31 | Lu par TriciaG |
An Explanation | 19:53 | Lu par TriciaG |
“Ought She? Could She?” | 19:34 | Lu par TriciaG |
Bits of Logic | 18:49 | Lu par TriciaG |
Just This Once | 19:38 | Lu par TriciaG |
“If I Had Known” | 21:12 | Lu par TriciaG |
A Fanatic Still | 20:20 | Lu par TriciaG |
“Won’t You Explain?” | 20:00 | Lu par TriciaG |
“If Jeanie Can” | 20:51 | Lu par TriciaG |
In “Father’s House” | 20:46 | Lu par TriciaG |
The Hardest Part | 21:04 | Lu par TriciaG |
I Am Anchored | 22:11 | Lu par TriciaG |
My Little Simple Story | 22:06 | Lu par TriciaG |
I Am to Go | 23:31 | Lu par TriciaG |
So Utterly Helpless | 21:02 | Lu par TriciaG |
Harbor at Last | 20:19 | Lu par TriciaG |
Waiting | 17:13 | Lu par TriciaG |
“And if it be Thy Will” | 22:36 | Lu par TriciaG |
Critiques
I'm not a Doctor, ...





Phxjennifer
...I don't even play one on TV, but I worked in the medical field for 30+ years and became very familiar with spinal cord injuries. It seems to me that our heroine had an 'incomplete' injury, in which the cord was not severed but very badly bruised. She did not merely benefit from one miracle, but from nearly daily miracles. Nineteenth Century medicine could do very little for spinal cord injuries (SCI), and most patients died within a few months to years. God's mercy prevented pressure sores, pneumonia, bladder infections, intestinal blockage, as well as all the communicable diseases that everyone risked. (well, you're not paying me for medical shop talk.) It is a very good book, and one I will reread and remember.





Interested Reader
Thank you TraciaG for bringing to life this wonderful testimony of a woman who had walked through the valley of shadow of death, and in whose life the Lord’s glorious and wonderful hand was most evidently visible!