What do you think?
Rate this book


480 pages, Kindle Edition
First published June 7, 2016
Saul could see, with unflinching clarity, the unbearable price he had exacted from all around him—family, friend, and foe—in order to become the king he had been called to be. He could no longer sleep. Food reminded him of the slaughter. The comfort he sought in wine only heightened his growing mistrust of all around him. Delusions of plot and persecution fueled the nightmares that kept him sleepless.We meet David the natural athlete, the untrained yet skilled musician, the beloved youngest child of his family. David is not the naive shepherd boy of legend, but when he was probably around 15, he was called down from tending sheep by Samuel, the judge over all of Israel, and anointed by him as the next King of Israel. As David's father Jesse says:
But our David, he is a little rare for the world. Sometimes people destroy what they do not understand; what they haven’t seen before; what they are not expecting.We meet Jonathan who grew up on his father's battlefields and could hardly remember life when Saul was just a father. Jonathan loves the man, but hates the King.
Jonathan stood at his father’s side during the ceremony. He harbored doubts. He was following his father into an ill-advised campaign at the behest of a priest he did not trust, on behalf of a God of whom he was, at best, uncertain.The pace of the book may seem a bit slow, but Eric Shaw Quinn takes the time to weave the story together so once David and Jonathan meet (at around 50%) we truly understand its significance, and its consequences. Their love story is mostly off-page, but you feel the love they share as they pledge a covenant between each other upon the stars in the heavens: “So long as those stars are in the heavens, my love shall last for you."