MIRACLES IN THE FORGOTTEN LAND AND BEYOND

Cambodian authors recount four brutal years of slavery and starvation

Gripping New Xulon Autobiography Will Hold Readers Spellbound

Cambodian authors recount four brutal years of slavery and starvation

2010-09-24

LONGWOOD, FL--Eighteen year-old Setan Lee was in shock as soldiers jumped out of huge trucks in Battambang Temple Square, shouting, "Enemies!" and pointing guns at them. Thirteen-year-old Randa Yos was at home in Battambang with her family that fateful day when they heard shouting in the street, ordering people to come out of their homes into the streets. They and thousands of others were forced at gunpoint to march to an unknown destination. That day began four years of slavery and starvation in the killing fields for thousands of Cambodians--an ordeal that is documented in the gripping new Xulon Press title, Miracles in the Forgotten Land and Beyond ($15.99, paperback, 978-1-60957-774-2), a story by co-authors Setan and Randa Lee and Shelba Hammond.

"You will run through a lot of emotions as you read this story," Evangelist William Fay says in the beginning of the book. "You will be astounded at the numerous first-hand miracles that 'God of the Universe' has done. You will find hope in whatever situation you are going through, [knowing] that if God did it for Setan, He can do it for you as well."

Co-author Shelba Hammond is the personal assistant to Setan and Randa Lee, and manages the Colorado office for their TransformAsia ministries. Through many hours of working alongside the Lees, hearing their stories, and reading what has been written about or by them, she has put their story together. It is their desire that God is glorified by this story, and that it will touch the hearts and lives of everyone who reads it.

 

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