Kirkus Reviews QR Code
GOD'S GREATEST MIRACLE by Jean-Michel Polyakov

GOD'S GREATEST MIRACLE

A Tale of Two Little Angels

by Jean-Michel Polyakov

Pub Date: March 26th, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-228-85689-4
Publisher: Tellwell Talent

A debut book presents a Christian tale for children.

The Institute for the Creation of New Essence Personalities is a place where angels experiment. They create new angels utilizing revolutionary techniques. While refining the process, they discovered that making a boy angel and a girl angel at the same time was a smart strategy. One day, a magnificent boy and girl pair is created. It turns out that new angels must attend school before they can be sent to Earth to be born as humans. But angel school can be intense. The archangel Gabriel warns his students that “you will find it is difficult to get your human body and brain to do what God would like as their design is to obey physical demands.” He explains that human bodies are “necessary vehicles for angels to evolve in awareness.” Fast-forward and that boy and girl from the institute have become humans. The boy is born into royalty as a prince. The girl is the daughter of a wealthy merchant family. The two meet at a young age, but, tragically, the girl’s days on Earth are remarkably short. Nevertheless, part of her Essence is passed on to another girl. When the prince grows up, he must find the one who received this Essence and help change the world for the better. While Polyakov’s series opener is brief, it still manages to go in some unexpected directions. The angel children, along with readers, learn not just about Christian beliefs, but also a slice of comparative religion. The kids are taught about the Buddhist Yogacara school and the idea of enlightenment. And how many Christian stories for children actually mention Enoch? Once the action moves to Earth, things get a little dull. The angels-turned-humans wind up establishing something called “the Institute for Conscious Evolution and Human Development.” This institute may be a grand force for good but it is no more inviting than it sounds. Still, the odd origins of this tale, as explained in the epilogue, make this book even more unusual than readers may have imagined at the get-go.

A simple yet surprisingly nuanced spiritual adventure.