![]() ![]() In the first book we were introduced to Atretes as he became a Roman captive and forced to be a gladiator. This book is all about Atretes and his journey back to his homeland. So he seeks out John the Baptist, who is the key to finding the custodian of his son, and brings his war-weary soul closer to redemption. Atretes, who holds fast to his dreams of revenge for the slaughter of his people, wants his son back. For her faith, Hadassah now languishes in condemnation, awaiting death in a dungeon beneath the arena. She has saved the life of the scorned child of a disreputable Roman woman and the Germanic gladiator, Atretes. This review will have slight spoilers.įollowing A Voice in the Wind and An Echo in the Darkness, As Sure as the Dawn continues the chronicles of Hadassah, a Christian slave woman living during the height of the Roman Empire. ![]() ![]() I’ll give you the synopsis and then my thoughts. I’ve reviewed the first book, A Voice in the Wind, and the second, An Echo in the Darkness, and I recommend reading those first. As Sure as the Dawn is the third and final book in the Mark of the Lion trilogy by Francine Rivers. ![]()
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