<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><strong>She was born to a king and was designated to temple service, but she is secretly terrified of the statues she is to serve for the rest of her life. </strong></p><p><strong>Can Uncle Abram's God, the one with no image, save her from this fate? </strong></p><p><br></p><p>It is an ancient rabbinic belief that Ruth was one of the many daughters of the Moabite king. I have used that as the tenet for weaving a tale of a concubine's daughter designated to temple service in keeping with the tradition of a king's daughter in the ancient near east. There is just one major problem with this royal assignment-the images of the gods deeply disturb the young princess. It is more than mere disturbance; Ruth secretly loathes being around the statues. They terrify her. Then one day, she reads about the God her ancestor served, a God with no image. In those same scrolls, she reads about a friend of that God, a man named Abram.</p><p>My readers will see Ruth's journey from conscripted servant to the gods of Moab to freewill worshipper of the God of Israel.</p>