

The story might have ended up being OK but the writing style was so bad I couldn't continue. " I feel a little bad assigning a rating to this book when I didn't even make it through two chapters.

" I can't put it down! This book makes you really think about your life in the world and of the world. And that's a very good thing! " - Sharon, It brings one face to face with the status of your relationship with God. Aside from that, I thought it was very creative and well written. I knew going in that it was a religious book, but I felt that it was just too much in my face. The writer was also really good and creating an amazing visualization of everything he wanted you to see. It had a lot of potential and a lot of good character development. " I would have really liked this book if I had not felt like it was preaching to me. Overall Performance: Narration Rating: Story Rating:.Rooms will appeal to readers who enjoy a mystery, strange happenings, and Christian fiction." He feels an unexplained comfort within the walls of the house. There is a connection, a sense of belonging within the home. With the intention of selling the home, Micah goes to look over the home and discovers that this is no ordinary home. Since Micah never knew his great uncle other than by reputation, he is stunned to find that the man has built him a home on the coast of Oregon. This begins to change when he receives a letter from a great uncle. It seems Micah has everything a man could want, fame, fortune, and a beautiful girlfriend, but there is still something missing. Rubart, is the story of Micah Taylor, a young man who has established himself in the software industry. Will Micah run - or will he risk everything to see what waits for him deep within the house’s ROOMS? And then he discovers the shocking truth: the home isn’t just spiritual, it’s a physical manifestation. All the locals will say is that the house is “spiritual.” Unsettling, since Micah’s faith slipped away like the tide years ago. Maybe Cannon Beach can be a perfect weekend getaway. Then he meets Sarah Sabin at the local ice cream shop. Micah goes to Cannon Beach intending to sell the house and keep his past buried, but the nine thousand square-foot home instantly feels like it’s part of him. The one place he never wants to see again. But Seattle software tycoon Micah Taylor can’t get it out of his mind - this claim that a home was built for him, by a great uncle he never knew, on the Oregon coast.
