Dive into today's most binge-worthy Christian suspense series!
College is easy for missionary kid Kennedy Stern. It's staying alive that's harder.
Engrossing, thought-provoking, and full of thrilling twists, the Kennedy Stern Christian series follows Kennedy as she tries hard to survive university. (Literally.)
Join Kennedy as she winds up a hostage after volunteering at a pregnancy center, a victim on the dangerous end of a police brutality scandal, a passenger on a hijacked plane ... and more!
"This series helps me grow in my faith in addition to being gripping and entertaining." ~ Phyllis Sather, Christian author
"Alana Terry is one of the few authors that doesn't create a bad book. Her stories are crafted with a lot of insight and tackle issues most authors wouldn't dream of touching." ~ Sheila McIntyre, book reviewer
Find out why the Kennedy Stern novels are being called "the most relevant Christian series of the decade."
Buy the complete nine-book library today, but be prepared to stay up late.
When Alana isn't writing, it's likely that she's on the floor wrestling with her kids. Or playing outside with her kids. Or chauffeuring her kids. Or trying some random science experiment with her kids. But she's probably not cooking or cleaning.
Alana is a homeschooling mother of three who loves to write, hates to cook, and enjoys reading a good book almost as much as she enjoys writing one.
Alana won the Women of Faith writing contest for "The Beloved Daughter," her debut inspirational novel. "What, No Sushi?" is Alana's first book in a chapter-book series for kids published by Do Life Right, Inc.
DNF’ed from boredom. Idk, I might return to it in the future but I was trying to read the series initially because it was marketed as “binge worthy.” I did not find it so. It is more hot-button topics than actual suspense. If the fourth book follows the pattern of the others, and so far looks like it will, then the characters are relatively flat. Kennedy in particular has no strong convictions, she has conservative convictions her parents say she should have being challenged by liberal views but even at the end of the books her own convictions on these topics are not clearly stated. She just feels like she has no growth. I share conservative values and would rather her come out strongly liberal or at least state why she’s in the middle plainly than the blurry edging around it. I just feel like if something is going to be a central topic in the story it has to have some kind of resolution. Otherwise make it a subplot you can leave vague. On the whole Kennedy is a very shallow character and by halfway through book three I lost hope of her changing much. Maybe I’ll finish it in the future and be surprised by the end.