![]() In both books, Gulley tells about memorable individuals, such as Charley in Porch Talk, the hardware store owner who dispenses hardware-type advice with your purchase at his store (“You will have to do that extra tight”), and Dr. Even though Home to Harmony is fiction, it feels as realistic as the stories in Porch Talk. Two examples are his Porch Talk, which contains thirty sketches describing some of his experiences as a Quaker pastor, and Home to Harmony, a novel, which contains 24 loosely connected stories from the experiences of Sam Gardner, a Quaker minister. ![]() Philip Gulley, one of the speakers at this summer’s EEWC conference in Indianapolis, “A Place at the Table,” has not only written books about theology (such as those described in the preceding review) but is also an engaging story teller. New York: HarperCollins, HarperSanFrancisco, 2002. New York: Harper Collins, HarperOne, 2007 ![]()
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