

Mechanic, and the lovely Sarah who works at the local ice-cream


Reflective life at the coast, with the friendship of Rick, the enigmatic

Side is his company, fellow-founder and recent girlfriend, Julie, fame, Two worlds and thinks he can pick and choose the best of both. People he was with on certain occasionsĪre sure their meetings never happened, while apparent strangers seem Goings-on behind the doors of various rooms, and weird things filter in Twelve years, informing him that a new coastal home has just been One day, he receives a letter from a great-uncle who's been dead for Taylor is a young business tycoon in the computer software industry. It's actually something like aĬhristian version of "Sliding Doors" which intrigued me from the start. Seems the blurb and cover of this book led some reviewers to think this Of his soul, which God uses to heal Micah’s darkest wounds and lead him But as he slowlyĭiscovers, the home isn’t just spiritual, it’s a physical manifestation Tide years ago, and he wants to keep it that way. This unnerves Micah because his faith slipped away like the The home, Micah suspects they have some connection to his enigmatic newįriend, Rick, the town mechanic. When bizarre things start happening in the rooms of Sarah Sabin at a nearby ice cream shop, he has two reasons to visit theīeach every weekend. Stunning brand new nine-thousand square foot house. Suspecting a prank, Micah arrives at Cannon Beach to discover a Home awaits him on the Oregon coast that will turn his world inside Twenty-five-year-old letter from a great uncle he never knew. Of his soul.In Seattle, young software tycoon Micah Taylor receives a cryptic, And then he discovers the shocking truth: the home isn’t just spiritual, it’s a physical manifestation. All the locals will say is that the house is “spiritual.” Unsettling, since Micah’s faith slipped away like the tide years ago. Maybe Cannon Beach can be a perfect weekend getaway.īut strange things happen in the house. Then he meets Sarah Sabin at the local ice cream shop. Micah goes to Cannon Beach intending to sell the house and keep his past buried, but the nine thousand square-foot home instantly feels like it’s part of him. The one place he never wants to see again. But Seattle software tycoon Micah Taylor can’t get it out of his mind - this claim that a home was built for him, by a great uncle he never knew, on the Oregon coast.
