
Outlaws of Ravenhurst
The year is 1640. Scotland has turned against the old faith, and the Gordon family faces an impossible choice: abandon their Catholic worship or become outlaws in their own land. When the authorities demand they surrender their priest and their conscience, they choose a harder path - retreating to the wild moors of Ravenhurst, where ancient secrets hide in stone walls and faith becomes a matter of survival. Sister Mary Imelda Wallace crafts a propulsive adventure where young readers discover courage isn't the absence of fear, but the refusal to abandon what matters most. Filled with narrow escapes, hidden passages, and villains both cowardly and cruel, this novel asks what it means to hold fast when the whole world demands you kneel. It endures because it refuses to sentimentalize conviction - faith here costs everything, and that's precisely why it matters.



