Joe B. Hewitt’s Books

I Was Raised a Jehovah’s Witness, Non-Fiction.
This is the
personal story of Joe B. Hewitt who escaped from the Watchtower Cult. The first
half of the book is a narrative of how the author came to the realization that
he had been lied to and had repeated lies to others, how, after he left the
Jehovah’s Witnesses his mother was forced to declare him dead and to shun him.
He tells of his call into the
ministry and experiences dealing with Jehovah’s Witnesses. The book refutes the
peculiar doctrines of the Watchtower Society such as: denial of the deity of
Jesus Christ; denial of his literal and physical resurrection; denial of the
Christian’s hope of heaven; denial of the existence of hell; and many others.
Hewitt also refutes the
Watchtower’s peculiar rules that Jehovah’s Witnesses are required to live by,
including prohibiting them from celebrating Christmas. A section: “Why
Celebrate Christmas?” gives Biblical reasons for celebrating Christmas.
1st Edition, 1979, Accent Books, Denver, sold 40,000 copies;
2nd Edition 1983, translated into Chinese, China Sunday School Association,
Taiwan; 3rd Edition, Kregel Books, Grand Rapids, sales with 1st Edition totaled
45,000 copies. After the book went out of print, the 1st and 3rd Editions
continued to sell as Kindle books on Amazon. The latest edition, 2013: I Was Raised a Jehovah’s Witness, 4th
Edition, Revised and Updated 6X9 Paperback 224 Pages or e-book. ISBN-13:978-1492909156. See www.joebhewitt.net
Rescuing Slaves of the Watchtower, Non-Fiction
Almost every family
has a member, friend, or co-worker who is under complete control of the
Watchtower Society. This book shows: how to rescue them and restore Jehovah’s
Witnesses to normal society, how to protect your children from being taken in
by this cult, and how to set free guilt-ridden and despondent Ex-Jehovah’s
Witnesses and restore them back into normal society.
The book contains endorsements from Dr. Bob Dean, Executive
Director of Dallas Baptist Association; Dr. Rudy Gonzalez, Dean, Southwestern
Baptist Theological Seminary; and Dr. Jimmy Draper, President Emeritus of
LifeWay publishing.
Rescuing Prisoners of
the Watchtower (Hannibal Books, Garland, Texas 2011, ISBN 978-1-61315-006-1.)
6X9 Paperback, or e-book, 262 Pages. See www.joebhewitt.net
Rescatando a los Prisioneros de los
Atalaya, Non-fiction
Por Joe B. Hewitt, traduccion por Glen Jolley.
Una gran mayoría de las familias en los EE.UU., Canadá, y
Méjico tienen un miembro de su familia, un amigo o un colega del trabajo bajo
el control de la Sociedad Watchtower. Los Testigos de Jehová están buscando
convertir especialmente al hispano parlante.

Este libro demuestra
Como rescatarlos y como reestablecer al Testigo de Jehová a
la sociedad normal.
Como proteger y evitar que
sus niños sean engañados por esta
secta, y
Como librar y reestablecer a los Testigos de Jehová que
están llenos de culpa y sin esperanza a una sociedad y vida normal.
Rescatando a los
Prisioneros de los Atalaya,6X9 258 Pages and e-book, ISBN
978-1-48129-686-1. See www.joebhewitt.net
Trivia
for Adults, Non-fiction
This little book contains rules for playing trivia, 620 new
and original questions and answers. None were copied from other sources. These
questions are for adults. There are no questions that only a teenager would
know. The book is to furnish educated, thinking people some brain exercise.
There is no board, tokens, or dice to roll, just questions and answers. One
person has to be in charge, to read the questions and help grade the teams.
Players form teams, quietly discuss the question among themselves and come up
with a consensus answer. 6X9, 152 Pages, and e-book, ISBN 13:978-148813419. See www.joebhewitt.net
A Pastor’s
Adventures, the Good, the Bad, and the Sad.
Pastor Joe B. Hewitt
tells of his adventures, including the call to ministry, seminary humor, the
pulpit, the baptistery, the Texas congregations, and missions to Mexico,
England, Russia, and Brazil. Hewitt could find humor most places and from most
people. He also records events that touch the heart and others that show some
people’s evil ingenuity to be stranger than fiction.
Nonfiction,
autobiography/memoir, 6x9, 228 Pages, paperback or e-book. ISBN-13:
973-1499277098. See www.joebhewitt.net
Mediation
Preparation
"Joe Hewitt's book, Mediation Preparation, should be helpful
to anyone going to mediation. It contains the basics for the layperson,
negotiating tools for the lawyers, strategy for mediators, and guidance for
clients to cooperate with their attorneys." Hon. Dale B. Tillery, Judge,
134th District Court, Dallas, Texas.
Mediation Preparation, nonfiction, 6x9, 100 pages, ISBN 9781514863763,
paperback or e-book.See www.joebhewitt.net
Fiction Books
Note:
These works of fiction include murder, mayhem and treachery, along with some
clever detective work, but no bad language. You could give one to your mother
without embarrassment.
(The
bad guys cuss, as usual, but it’s not spelled out in the books.)
Murder on the Sky Ride Fiction/Mystery
This novel is full of action and good detective work. It
also gives a picture of the diverse ethnic and cultural makeup of Texas. It
gives a private view of two Texas families, one whose members range from dope
smuggler to successful attorney-politician, and the other ranging from a
hot-head Chicano activist to a Texas Ranger.
Some of the
characters: Gar Garcia, Texas Ranger under special orders of the governor;
Steve Pearce, 21, ex-convict, trying to stay out of trouble but not succeeding;
Johnny Diaz, almost, but not quite, bad to the bone; Burke Masters, big man
with big money; and Hawknose, career criminal.
The story is set in San Marcos, Texas, at an amusement park
located where the San Marcos River, as a giant spring, wells up out of the
ground cool and clear. San Marcos is a real city but events and characters
portrayed there are fictional. Real people are mentioned, such as Lyndon B.
Johnson and Jimmy Carter, but are not characters.
Historical notes about the Texas Rangers are accurate. The
mammalian diving reflex described in the novel is accurate, as well as the
homicide exclusion in insurance policies, and oil field technicalities, but
events surrounding them are fictional.
The story takes place in 1978 when detectives had to work
harder than now. They had two-way radios, telephone beepers, but no cell phones
or personal computers. Most police departments had no computers at all. Police
reports were laboriously typed out by hand over several carbon copies, the last
of which were barely legible. Police work was real work. Go along with Texas Ranger Gar Garcia as he
works through clues, diversions, and deception.
Murder on the Sky Ride,
6X9, 300 Pages, ISBN 978 098 4989 706, paperback or e-book.
See www.joebhewitt.net
Mystery of the Vanished Gold, Fiction/Mystery
Three robbers wearing
Alfred E. Newman rubber masks rob a Dallas bank of $20 million and several safe
deposit boxes containing gold. During the robbery a killer handcuffs two men
together to a barred gate and executes them with a .22 bullet to the head.he invasion
robbers move with military precision and vanish with the money and gold.
A newly-commissioned Texas Ranger, Hank Garcia, chases the
gold and money to Spain, South Africa, and Panama. Not only is the vanished
gold a mystery, but also the motive for murder.
FBI Agent Naomi Robertson works with Hank and becomes a love
interest.
Some of the other characters that lend color to the story
include, Emo Etto a Nigerian soldier of
fortune; Wan Ol Key, a 130-pound martial arts expert using a Mongolian
passport; Sheikha Eisha ben Ali, wife of a mysterious Arab of questionable
existence, who can charm the gold out of men’s pockets; Handsome Jòrge Sanchez,
a Panamanian lover of women and gold; Nurse Alberta Shehzad whom Hank covets;
Emile Deutchmann, South African soldier of fortune; and two beautiful young
women, Gayle and Katie, who are involved more than they know.
Regardless of numerous suspects and possibilities, Hank’s
excellent detective work triumphs.
If you like mysteries, action, interesting characters,
frequent changes of scenes, an adventure story with romance, but no gutter
language, you will like this novel.
6X9, 236 Pages, ISBN 13:9781491063705, Paperback or e-book. See www.joebhewitt.net
My Love, My Enemy Fiction/Historical
An anomaly for her
time, Cassandra although a Virginian, hates slavery and is an avowed
abolitionist, an unpopular view in Huntsville, Alabama, in 1858. Fairfax and
Cassandra become intimate at an early age.
They marry after Fairfax’s graduation from West Point. When the Civil
War breaks out, Fairfax resigns his US Army commission and joins the
Confederacy. He is ordered on detached duty as a Confederate spy. He assumes
the identity of a Union officer named William Wiley and establishes himself in
the War Department in Washington. William Wiley looks exactly like Fairfax.
Cassandra volunteers to spy for the
Union. She takes advantage of her position as the wife of a Confederate Army
major to attend social functions and gather intelligence.
Fairfax and Cassandra are totally
in love, and long for each other, but are separated ideologically and
geographically, and unaware of the other's wartime activities.
Both go through narrow escapes in
action scenes. Both are totally convinced of the rightness of their cause, and
use the same slogan, "Our cause is just. Continue we must."
Fairfax gets caught, escapes
Washington, and twice more gets into traps, which he escapes by assuming the
identity of William Wiley, Captain, US Army. Eventually he is found out and
sent to the notorious Camp Douglas in Chicago where one out of four Confederate
prisoners died.
After the War Between the States
ends the war between Fairfax and Cassandra begins as they learn one another’s
secrets. Cassandra learns that Fairfax had been unfaithful and fathered a
child. In an armed truce, with love and hate, they stay together but only in a
physical sense.
Complicating things further, Union
occupation forces arrest Fairfax, thinking he is Captain William Wiley, U.S.
Army, and charge him with desertion. The real William Wiley’s wife shows up and
claims Fairfax is her husband.
You’ll be surprised at the ending.
“WOW! I LOVE LOVE LOVE
this book. It is right up my alley! I hope to be finished with it
by weeks end. I have found some little things but nothing too
major. I am hoping I have not missed anything in my greed to get to the
next sentence and the next paragraph.” —-Literary Critic Nancy Riddick.
“Joe Hewitt weaves an intriguing
and tragic story of the cataclysm that rocked the United States in the 1860s
and likewise ripped apart many American families. Part historical novel, part
thriller, and part romance, this book will both entertain and sadden.
Especially descriptive is Hewitt’s account of the terrors experienced by
prisoners of war in the Union version of the notorious Confederate camp at
Andersonville, the equally brutal Camp Douglas in Chicago, Illinois.” —Dr. Mike
Williams, History Professor at Dallas Baptist University.
My
Love, My Enemy, by Joe B. Hewitt, Historical Fiction, 75,000 Words See www.joebhewitt.net
6X9 Paperback 284 pages, or E-book,
ISBN 978-1494326029; LCCN 2014902417
No comments:
Post a Comment