About This Book
This second book in the series of Amnesia Husband can stand alone without book #1 or any books that follow. Due to meningitis-induced amnesia, the detective novelist Roy Anderson believes himself to be the pastor of a struggling church in a small town called Corinth--a town in which no one knows him or his wife LeeAnn--a town they are simply visiting for a short time. He believes that he knows everyone, but simply cannot remember their names. He begins assigning names to them, thinking that his memory is returning--but it is not. Since he has been reading in the Book of Revelation, and since the majority of his "false memories" come from things he reads, he believes that the people at this church are in fact the people to whom the letters of Revelation 2:1-3:22 were written. Being quick to recognize their strengths, weaknesses and sins, he simply calls them by such names as: Ephie Sus, Mrs. Sus, and all the little Susses, after the letter to the church at Ephesus. When he runs into legal problems, he calls for help, asking Jake-Patrick (the young man from Book #1 he believes to be his son-in-law) and Butch-Geoffrey (the elderly man from Book #1 he believes to be his father) for help. Through it all, LeeAnn endeavors to be the kind of wife that brings pleasure to the Lord, meditating on Proverbs 31. This is a comical tale that takes a lighthearted look at the serious subject of trouble in church, allowing the reader to enjoy the story, but at the same time give pause for thought concerning the deeper issues of God's people being one in the Lord and serving Him faithfully, turning from sin, and worshiping the Lord both in the worship service and in daily living, even to the point of forgiving one another.