Blaine Yorgason Views
This period also saw the development of popular LDS fiction, starting as early as the late 1970s, when the leading LDS publisher, Church-owned Deseret Book, began publishing fiction, in response to the success of self-published and small-press fiction and the development of independent LDS bookstores. Authors in this wave of popular fiction, including Shirley Sealy, Randy Jernigan, Susan Evans McCloud, Jack Weyland, Brenton G. Yorgason and Blaine M. Yorgason, and Carol Hoefling Morris, produce new home literature, following the example set by authors nearly a century earlier.[citation needed]
Finding Mercie is Blaine M. Yorgason's newest release and is a captivating story. It begins with the discovery by Hector Lopez of a little girl covered in blood near a dumpster in Chicago. When no one responds to his calls for help, he gathers up the child in his coat and runs with her nearly three miles to the closest hospital. The medical staff examine her and learn her only injury is a bullet wound, though she is dehydrated and suffers from hypothermia.
Finding Mercie is Blaine M. Yorgason's newest release and is a captivating story. It begins with the discovery by Hector Lopez of a little girl covered in blood near a dumpster in Chicago. When no one responds to his calls for help, he gathers up the child in his coat and runs with her nearly three miles to the closest hospital. The medical staff examine her and learn her only injury is a bullet wound, though she is dehydrated and suffers from hypothermia.
Finding Mercie is Blaine M. Yorgason's newest release and is a captivating story. It begins with the discovery by Hector Lopez of a little girl covered in blood near a dumpster in Chicago. When no one responds to his calls for help, he gathers up the child in his coat and runs with her nearly three miles to the closest hospital. The medical staff examine her and learn her only injury is a bullet wound, though she is dehydrated and suffers from hypothermia.