Angry with her father for moving their family to another state, eleven-year-old Chelsea disobeys him by making long distance calls to her best friend back home, but having Jesus in her life helps improve the situation.
Search Results
Angry and worried about her grandmother's illness, Roxie lies to her parents and risks losing her friend Chelsea, but putting her trust in Jesus helps her repair the damage.
When she is teased by her older brother and a classmate and no longer spoiled by her mother, nine-year-old Daisy turns to her friends and Jesus to help her grow up.
Hannah struggles with her Native American heritage especially after her cousin comes to visit and questions her involvement with the King's Kids and her acceptance of Jesus as her Savior.
Twelve-year-old Roxie prays for guidance in helping her sister Lacy and her brother Eli, both of whom have been acting strangely and may be in trouble.
As Sadie Rose and her prairie family face robbery by Indians, a dangerous mountain man, and other perils, she attempts to guard a special secret and acquires certain valuable realizations about forgiveness and courage.
Out on the Nebraska prairie with her brother, Sadie Rose sees an Indian warrior, runs into cousins from Michigan, and searches for a missing friend.
After God answers her prayers by giving her three new best friends, twelve-year-old Hannah worries because they are suddenly too busy to stand by her, at a time when she is facing prejudice against her because she is an Ottawa Indian.
Roxie wished the Best Friends hadn't talked her into teaching Mary how to paint a picture of a rose. What if Mary won the art contest instead of Roxie? Was Mary's brother the one who was secretly sending Roxie's sister long-stemmed roses? And if he was, how could Roxie get Dan to...
Thirteen-year-old Sadie Rose and a runaway woman from Boston depend on their faith when they lose their way in a snow storm and are taken captive by rustlers on the Nebraska frontier.