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When I imagine our audience, I see kids huddled around a phone in the dark.

  • Greg Silker
  • Jul 4
  • 2 min read

Character art for Hero/Scarboy and his younger brother Little Child (L.C.).
Character art for Hero/Scarboy and his younger brother Little Child (L.C.).

When I imagine the audience for Tales of the Kingdom, I picture kids, age 5-14 huddled around a smart phone in the dark.

Tales of the Kingdom opens with children like that - Hero, age 13 and Little Child, age 4, at their mother’s funeral in Enchanted City.

Hero’s mother’s final words echoed in his mind,


Take Little Child and escape! Escape before branding time (when the Enchanter put his mark on the soul and body of every child)!

Escape to the place where trees grow!”


Take Little Child and escape before branding time!

Even as orphans, alone in a dark city, Hero and L.C. had one hope.  Their mother had told them amazing tales of a good, but exiled king and his kingdom of light.

With the promise of those tales, the boys took their chance to escape, before they were claimed forever by the evil one.


Like the Enchanter in Tales of the Kingdom, the enemy of our souls wants to brand the souls of every man, woman and child on on earth.  He wants to steal our hope while we are young, before we know how to fight back. ht back


We want to help kids fight that darkness.


We want to plant stories of Jesus in the hearts and minds of children around the planet.

When kids are huddled around those phones, we want them to see amazing stories of our good King, so that they can escape and find the hope and purpose they were created for.


With God’s grace and by his leading, we will do it.


The Tales of the Kingdom books have opened doors to share Christ around the world for decades, encouraging believers and wooing seekers.  


Help turn the Tales of the Kingdom into an animated series.



 
 
 

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