Philo is a Syro-Phoenician boy of 12 on the cusp of manhood, living during the time of Christ’s ministry on earth. His father is a fisherman who drowns during a bad storm and Philo’s safe and secure life is turned upside down. In addition, he has an older sister who appears to be demon-possessed and Philo is angrily resentful of the devotion his mother spends on her, often overlooking Philo and younger sister. He is obliged to work for the man who is renting his father’s boat, a man who is petty and cruel. Philo and his younger sister begin hearing about this Jewish miracle worker named Jesus; his sister is immediately convinced, but Philo is resistant to the idea of Jesus working miracles. In short, Philo is angry, resentful, proud and pig-headed. But somehow the author still makes him a sympathetic character, perhaps because we also are sometimes all those things. When Philo’s mother sells the prized fishing boat to the man so she can have money to pay a charlatan to try to heal the demon-possessed daughter, Philo is disgusted and leaves home to work for his uncle, a fisherman on the Sea of Galilee. Read the book if you want to know what happens.
The author very cleverly interjects real stories from scripture into the Philo’s life - for one thing, his mother is the very Syro-Phoenician woman who comes to Jesus asking for healing for her daughter and who has the conversation with Him about how even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from the table. Her descriptions of the times, the characters and the area are vivid and appear to be well-researched.