Grandma's Miracles; or, Stories Told at Six o'Clock in the Evening

Grandma's Miracles; or, Stories Told at Six o'Clock in the Evening
Every Saturday evening, the Wilbur children gather around Grandma as the clock strikes six. This is the sacred hour she has claimed for storytelling, and each tale springs from a single verse of Scripture. What follows is neither sermon nor lesson, but something far more beguiling: grandma-wisdom woven into narrative, moral truth rendered through character and consequence, and the quiet magic of a generation sharing its hard-won understanding with the young. The book invites readers into this circle, to sit alongside the Wilbur children and receive what grandma dispenses not as duty but as gift. For readers drawn to vintage children's literature, this offers a portal into a vanished world of family devotion, where faith was taught not from pulpits but from rocking chairs, and where a child's hardest questions were answered in story form. It endures for the same reason any beloved book endures: it captures something true about love across generations.













