This package includes all four books
of the Daughters of Faith Series Set 1:
Freedom's Pen, Courage to Run, The
Hallelujah Lass, and Ransom's Mark.
There are a few elements of the
Daughters of Faith Series that separate
it from many other children's book
biographies. First, these books are
about little girls. They are not
biographies of the entire life of these
characters- these are stories about
girls who made a difference while they
were still young. This enables the
young girl readers to relate to the
characters more than they would if
these characters had to wait until they
were thirty or forty before doing
anything significant. Second, these
stories are faith journeys. Lawton gets
inside the minds of these girls in
order to portray their struggles to
make God an active part of their lives.
In Freedom's Pen, Phillis Wheatley was
a little girl of seven or eight years
old when she was captured in Gambia and
brought to America as a slave in 1761.
But she didn't let her circumstances
keep her down. She learned to read and
write in English and Latin, and showed
a natural gift for poetry. By the time
she was twelve, her elegy at the death
of the great pastor George Whitefield
brought her worldwide acclaim. Phillis
became known to heads of state,
including George Washington himself,
speaking out for American independence
and the end of slavery. She became the
first African American to publish a
book, and her writings would eventually
win her freedom. More importantly, her
poetry still proclaims Christ almost
250 years later.
In Courage to Run, Harriet Tubman was
born a slave on a Maryland plantation
in the 1800's. She trusts in God, but
her faith is tested at every turn.
Should she obey her masters or listen
to her conscience? This story from
Harriet's childhood is a record of
courage. Even more, it's the story of
God's faithfulness as He prepares her
for her adult calling to lead more than
300 people out of slavery through the
Underground Railroad.
In The Hallelujah Lass, Lawton tells
the story of Eliza Shirley, a 16-year-
old girl who traveled from England to
pioneer the work of the Salvation Army
in the United States. As a teenager
growing up in nineteenth-century
England, Eliza was the picture of a
proper young lady. But she longed for
more than an ordinary, middle-class
life. When a group of Hallelujah
Lassies marches into Coventry with a
ragtag bunch of followers, singing and
banging tabourines, even ensuing riots
cannot keep Eliza away. She knows, at
last, that this is the work God has
prepared for her. And she is ready, no
matter what the cost.
In Ransom's Mark, when 13-year-old
Olive Oatman's wagon train is raided by
outlaw Yavapai Indians, she and her
sister are captured. After enduring
harsh treatment, they are ransomed by a
band of Mohaves. Olive struggles to
adjust to her new life, but finds
comfort in her faith and in an
unexpected friendship. When the time
comes for her to return to the white
world, she is afraid she will never fit
in. But she learns to see the Mohave
design tattooed on her chin as a sign
of God's love and deliverence, a mark
of ransom.