Harry Kraus
As a board-certified surgeon, Harry Kraus has divided his professional life between Virginia and East Africa. His novel, "Could I Have This Dance?" was the number one CBA bestseller in the contemporary category. His novels are laced with his signature of medical realism. He has been both an ACFW...
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As a board-certified surgeon, Harry Kraus has divided his professional life between Virginia and East Africa. His novel, "Could I Have This Dance?" was the number one CBA bestseller in the contemporary category. His novels are laced with his signature of medical realism. He has been both an ACFW Book of the Year and Christie Award for Inspirational Fiction finalist.Harry loves miniature Schnauzers and motorcycles and is passionate about spreading the good news of GRACE. In addition to his love of writing fiction, he has written three non-fiction books: "Breathing Grace," "The Cure," and "Domesticated Jesus."Visit his website: www.harrykraus.com for information about books and to read his blog: Field Notes.Visit his blog: www.3menwalkintoablog.comYou can join Harry Kraus Readers Group on Facebook and become Harry's FB friend. His listing is Harry Lee Kraus.
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Harry Kraus's Books
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See my thoughts about Lip Reading here: http://www.justtalkingbooks.com/1/post/2013/12/recent-reads-29-december-2013.html
Moving from comfortable Virginia to Kenya to begin the nation’s first heart surgery programme sounds like a noble objective, but Dr Jace Rawlings is running away. He’s running away from a broken marriage, a possible affair and memory loss, and returning to the town where he grew up as a missionary k...
Harry Kraus, M.D., may have been writing fiction since 1994, but his name is nowhere near as well-known as fellow Christian authors Ted Dekker, Tim LaHaye, and Jerry B. Jenkins. I think that's quite unfortunate, because Dr. Kraus is a wonderful author, as evidenced by "The Stain." It's partly an "...
This was a fascinating story of an African American woman who comes to terms with her past while dealing with her present. Camille Weller's mother was African, and her father was a white American doctor that was helping in the Congo. The storyline jumps between Camille's memories in the Congo in 196...