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| | TIME.com: Jaunty Sermons -- Nov. 22, 1948 -- Page 1 |
 | | The Big Fisherman, the eleventh, has all the characteristics of its predecessors that have made Dr. Douglas one of the most popular of living novelists. |
 | | The nomadic simplicity of desert life is so contrasted with the hypocrisy of the cities that Dr. Douglas sometimes seems to be loading the dice in favor of the outdoors and in favor of the Arabs as against the Jews. |
 | | There is another side of Jewish life, however, which Fara discovers when she is befriended by Simon, known as the Big Fisherman, a simple, kindly man who becomes a follower of the religious teachings of a Carpenter. |
| www.time.com /time/magazine/article/0,9171,853531,00.html (774 words) |
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