Thank you for your interest in Waterfall Junction and The Narrow Bridge. As you may have figured out, this book contains not one but two short adventure stories about failure and triumph over adversity while trusting in God to get us through the pain.
In the e-book version, you start with “Waterfall Junction,” a story about a disgraced knight who must own up to the abandonment of his people and overcome his fear of the unknown before he can reclaim his honor and return to leadership. Then you move on to “The Narrow Bridge,” a parable about the destruction of the comfortable life and the journey an ordinary man must take to enter a land borne of peace. But on this site, you can choose either story to begin with. Finishing one story will give you the option to start the other, if you wish.
In “Waterfall Junction,” Dalowin the Rabbit, head of a loyal army of knights, is commissioned to raid the city at the bottom of the hill and destroy the evil forces that lurk inside. Trouble is, he’s afraid to lead the charge, and he’s even more afraid to send his men into battle when the opposition is so fierce. So he abandons his army and runs for safety that he might spare both himself and his men. But thanks to a personal journey that leads him to a place where his faith and resolve are tested, Dalowin the Rabbit may just get his courage back, as long as the test doesn’t kill him first.
In “Waterfall Junction,” Dalowin the Rabbit, head of a loyal army of knights, is commissioned to raid the city at the bottom of the hill and destroy the evil forces that lurk inside. Trouble is, he’s afraid to lead the charge, and he’s even more afraid to send his men into battle when the opposition is so fierce. So he abandons his army and runs for safety that he might spare both himself and his men. But thanks to a personal journey that leads him to a place where his faith and resolve are tested, Dalowin the Rabbit may just get his courage back, as long as the test doesn’t kill him first.
In “The Narrow Bridge,” Kirk is an adventurer who’s just trying to find his way to the Land of God, but he faces many insurmountable obstacles along the way, including temptations to wander off course and disasters that impede his forward progress. But his truest test comes when he faces the great chasm between the two lands and the hordes of travelers who think they know how best to reach the other side, and he must decide which of them really knows the truth, for certain death finds those who get it wrong.
Regardless of which story you begin with, I hope you enjoy them both, and I hope you’ll leave a review on Amazon or Goodreads for the duology when you’re done. Thanks for reading.