Chains of Gold: Charlie Q.’s struggle to be free of intangible, invisible chainsAuthorHouse, 29 באוג׳ 2007 - 324 עמודים
Charlie O’Malley is filled with grief, anxiety and hopelessness as he stands on the banks of Lake Erie and contemplates suicide. Jewel Brady, an avowed atheist has just broken their engagement because she cannot endure being married to a preacher. The temptation to throw himself into the dark, roiling waters of the lake pulls him toward the bank. You first met Charlie and Jewel in the books Anguish of the Innocent and Guilt in Disguise when they fell in love in high school. Charlie’s decision to be a preacher was the catalyst, which tore them apart. Now Charlie must decide whether to marry the girl he loves or follow through on his commitment to God. In her despair and depression, Jewel casts aside her moral convictions and begins a destructive lifestyle, which puts her in situations that have life-long consequences. Charlie’s brother, Hubert and Jewel begin a romantic relationship, unaware of the other’s relationship to Charlie. World War I and the great influenza epidemic bring death and grief to Buffalo, so Charlie must decide whether to join the military or stay home and minister to the people in his church. You will weep with the broken hearted, rejoice with the victorious and hope for a solution to a seemingly hopeless situation when you read Chains of Gold set in Buffalo, New York in Nineteen-seventeen.
Carolyn Erickson, Retired Peace Corp volunteer: This chapter in the life of Billy Richards (a.k.a. Charlie Q. O’Malley, II) takes him from hopelessness and despair to the strong belief in his life’s mission. The spiritual strength he grows into along the way helps him in his relationships to himself, his friends, and an almost lost brother. In this, he is a lot like the rest of us.
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... Billy Richards' life was forever drastically changed. In an attempt to prevent the lynching of an innocent man by the Ku Klux Klan, Billy fired a shotgun and accidentally struck one of them. In fear of the Sheriff and the KKK he fled ...
... Billy Richards. Now at twenty-one he was no longer Billy Richards but Charlie O'Malley, thanks to his adopted father, Charles Quincy (Speedy) O'Malley, whom he now called Pops. Waves roiled across the lake, their destination, the rocky ...
... Billy Richards for fear he would learn thatI had killed a man. When I refused to tell him, he made a name for me. I can still hear him and see the mischievous glint in his eye. “Ifyou won't tell me, I'll give you my own name. I ain't ...
... Billy Richards, the fugitive. I was the Barber, now the Preacher. Pops, dear, dear Pops, thank you! Charlie was jolted back to reality by a sudden loud blast from the fog-horn of an approaching boat. A jagged streak of lightening zig ...
... Billy Richards, who refused to tell him his name. After adopting Billy and re-naming him Charlie (after himself) they settled down to a peaceful life in the apartment over the barbershop. Charlie fell in love, but today, he was jilted ...