Limpy

Limpy
Author: Darell B. Dyal
Publisher: iUniverse
Total Pages: 213
Release: 2005-03-06
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0595783643

limpy is a gripping story about men of faith (limpy, Mishpat and Didasko) who are mortified to discover that, even in the church they love, the ways of the Bible have been corrupted exactly as foretold by Jesus 2,000 years before. They suffer as they realize that cherished practices are not only wrong, but cannot possibly meet the needs of God's children. This anguishing discovery compels them to actions they could not have imagined. Their answer to the plague of today's church-which makes limpy a must read book-is wonderfully enriched by the nobility of their lives as the tale unfolds. But there is more. Truth that is greater than life emerges from deep within the pathos of their struggle. A groan uttered by creation itself travails for the manifesting of the sons of God. There is an unquenchable thirsting, an insatiable hungering for His fullness; a groaning to be home with Him, forever. When you read limpy, you will know it is so; and you will be comforted. The book is both promise and warning. In the fullness of time, God will gather believing Jews and Gentiles to be a holy temple, a dwelling place for Himself in the Spirit.

Limpy's Adult Lexicon

Limpy's Adult Lexicon
Author: Joseph Heywood
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 255
Release: 2023-08-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1493072994

From the author of the Woods Cop and Lute Bapcat mysteryseries comes a new book for the fans. When Heywood was writing his first Woods Cop novel, into his mind crawled a character called Limpy Allerdyce, who is a master poacher-predator-violator in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan—that is, the turf where Heywood’s novels take place. The first description of Limpy was in Ice Hunter. Much like Shakespeare’s outrageous character Falstaff, Allerdyce exhibits little doubt in himself, and though he seems to exhibit a dark view of life and living, there are glimpses of lights at other levels sometimes flashing like distant small beacons. Unlike Falstaff, who virtually everyone is happy to see and be around (until they aren’t), no one is ever glad to see Limpy because his reputation scares the hell out of everybody he comes in contact with (and most who’ve only heard about him)—everyone, that is, except Grady Service, conservation officer and hero of Heywood’s novels. A minor character at first, Limpy’s role in the novels has grown with time. For Yoopers who are far and away (and some who are not so far and away), one thing is true for all of them: they all want to return to the UP as soon as they can. Till that day, they have the novels of Joe Heywood and Limpy’s Adult Lexicon to comfort them.