A Tale That Is Told: The Autobiography of Opal Earp Pounds

Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book A Tale That Is Told: The Autobiography of Opal Earp Pounds by Opal Earp Pounds, Opal Earp Pounds
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Opal Earp Pounds ISBN: 9781370464593
Publisher: Opal Earp Pounds Publication: August 4, 2017
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Opal Earp Pounds
ISBN: 9781370464593
Publisher: Opal Earp Pounds
Publication: August 4, 2017
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

The title of this book is a quotation from Psalms 90:9-10, and the Biblical reference is a key to the Christian concerns that characterize the author's life from her conversion in 1952 at the age of 32 to her death in 2009 at the age of 89. Born in 1920, Opal Earp was reared on a farm northwest of Stroud, Oklahoma where her grandparents had homesteaded. In 1938 she graduated from Chandler High School and the next year she married Archie Pounds of Chandler. They had three children born between 1941 and 1946. The account of her life after 1952 is controlled by her desire to be a Christian mother, and her description of family events after that year is strongly colored by this desire. Thus the narrative is not only an account of the life of a farm girl born in Lincoln County, Oklahoma, it is also a conversion narrative in the tradition of Jonathan Edwards. Fifty years after Edwards' death, large numbers of people were converted in the Second Great Awakening of 1800 and the great revival at Cane Ridge, Kentucky that quickly followed and which became the pioneering event in the history of frontier camp meetings in America. Opal knew very little of these earlier events, but their shadow is felt in the tale that she tells.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The title of this book is a quotation from Psalms 90:9-10, and the Biblical reference is a key to the Christian concerns that characterize the author's life from her conversion in 1952 at the age of 32 to her death in 2009 at the age of 89. Born in 1920, Opal Earp was reared on a farm northwest of Stroud, Oklahoma where her grandparents had homesteaded. In 1938 she graduated from Chandler High School and the next year she married Archie Pounds of Chandler. They had three children born between 1941 and 1946. The account of her life after 1952 is controlled by her desire to be a Christian mother, and her description of family events after that year is strongly colored by this desire. Thus the narrative is not only an account of the life of a farm girl born in Lincoln County, Oklahoma, it is also a conversion narrative in the tradition of Jonathan Edwards. Fifty years after Edwards' death, large numbers of people were converted in the Second Great Awakening of 1800 and the great revival at Cane Ridge, Kentucky that quickly followed and which became the pioneering event in the history of frontier camp meetings in America. Opal knew very little of these earlier events, but their shadow is felt in the tale that she tells.

More books from Biography & Memoir

Cover of the book Believe It by Opal Earp Pounds
Cover of the book Overlay: One Girl's Life in 1970s Las Vegas by Opal Earp Pounds
Cover of the book The Shattered Jewel by Opal Earp Pounds
Cover of the book Note by Note by Opal Earp Pounds
Cover of the book Unhooked by Opal Earp Pounds
Cover of the book Vipère au poing d'Hervé Bazin (Analyse de l'oeuvre) by Opal Earp Pounds
Cover of the book Under the Clock by Opal Earp Pounds
Cover of the book Sicily on My Mind by Opal Earp Pounds
Cover of the book L'any del pensament màgic by Opal Earp Pounds
Cover of the book Supercoach by Opal Earp Pounds
Cover of the book Wilfred Thesiger in Africa by Opal Earp Pounds
Cover of the book Jack Knudsen Northrop: Aviation Pioneer And His Flying Wing by Opal Earp Pounds
Cover of the book Journal d'un voyage aux mers polaires by Opal Earp Pounds
Cover of the book Jan Rubes by Opal Earp Pounds
Cover of the book Through the Hitler Line by Opal Earp Pounds
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy