Did King David Exist? Was he a real person? Some scholars have said “No,” he was just a heroic Jewish myth. That’s the topic for the fifth video on the Age of the Kingdom Series YouTube Channel. You can watch it below.
Comments closedCategory: The Bible
My fourth video on the YouTube Channel Age of the Kingdom Series is out. You can watch it below.
Comments closedWatch the third video on my new YouTube channel below. Visit the channel here: https://youtube.com/@AgeOfTheKingdomSeries.
Comments closedHere’s the second episode of my YouTube Channel. It is video from the book signing I had at “Words & Wine” at the Kona Stories bookstore in Keauhou, Hawaii.
If you enjoy this video, like and subscribe to my new YouTube channel.
Click on the image below to view the video.
Comments closedI’ve been thinking about starting a YouTube Channel for a while, and I finally pulled the trigger.
It’s https://youtube.com/@AgeOfTheKingdomSeries. It’s obviously about my biblical historical fiction series, Age of the Kingdom. The first episode is titled “Are Old Testament Stories History or Myth?” It’s basically an introduction to the channel, plus reading a little from Quest for a King, the first novel in the series.
Subsequent episodes will be video from my recent book signing titled “Reading from the Age of the Kingdom novels” and “5 Things You Should Know Before Reading the Bible.”
Future episodes will deal with my research in writing these books, problems with writing fiction based on 3,000-year-old stories and more.
I hope you’ll consider liking my videos and subscribing to my channel!
Comments closedI’m excited to let you know I’m going to be one of the featured local authors at Kona Stories bookstore at the monthly “Words & Wine” event on Tuesday, August 6, at 6 pm. I’ll be talking about and reading from “Quest for a King” and “Exile of the King.”
Kona Stories has been doing monthly, local-author book signings for many years. I did one in 2018, when I was able to talk about my “Backlash” series.
Kona Stories is located in Keauhou Shopping Center. If you are local on Hawaii Island, come by and say “hi”!
Comments closedI recently posted some background on my research for the books in the Age of the Kingdom series, but recently I’ve found a great new source that I wanted to talk about here.
In a piece of timing that was more than coincidence, in my opinion, I discovered the Armstrong Institute of Biblical Archeology (AIBA). They are having an especially good deal on membership right now and I took advantage of it. Imagine my delight when the first issue of the organization’s publication Let The Stones Speak arrived and the topic was “David and Solomon’s Monumental Kingdom”!
(Image public domain from Wikimedia Commons)
The story of David and Goliath is an iconic underdog story and “David and Goliath” is applied as a catch-phrase every time there is an underdog pitted against a gargantuan foe.
But how well do we know the story in the context of the stories on either side of it? Did you know that there’s a problem with the story that some skeptics have used to inspire doubt in the Bible?
It has to do with the question: Did King Saul know David BEFORE he killed Goliath?
Continue reading Did King Saul Know David Before He Killed Goliath? Comments closedGary Ivey’s books make great Father’s Day gifts, especially the newest ones from the Age of the Kingdom series. Some women have felt like the battle scenes are too intense, but men say, “That’s why I like them!”
Just in time for Father’s Day, you can get 25% off on any of Gary L. Ivey’s books. Just enter the code “Dad25off” to get 25% off your entire order!
Comments closed(Image created in Dall-E AI and extended using Adobe Photoshop Generative Extend)
In my previous post, I began with generalities about my research for writing the Age of the Kingdom series. Now I’ll share a little of the source material I leaned on in my research.
Of course, my starting point is the Bible, and because I believe the Bible is a book of truths for life, I’m not going to stray too far from the events that are described there. I reread not just First and Second Samuel, but also the books that went before, Judges, Joshua and the Pentateuch. These books and their stories are inseparable from the events in Samuel and Kings, because it’s all one continuous narrative.
Continue reading How To Research 3,000-year-old Historical Fiction (part 2) 2 Comments