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Redeemed Reader: Megan Saben '99 and Betsy Farquhar '97

Megan (VanderHart) Saben ā99 remembers when the turning point came. She was in Professor Ethan Pettitās Childrenās Literature class her senior year at Covenant when he taught them about truth and story in literature. He explained to them, āYou can have truth with either an uppercase āTā or a lowercase āt.ā You can have story with an uppercase āSā or a lowercase āsāā says Megan. "And how you can mix and match them. Truth can be found in a story, Story with truth, and truth with story. The best of all is finding Truth with Story," she continues, āHow it applied to childrenās literature was so enlightening and became a turning point.ā She says that Ethan Pettit showed the class how Truth and Story can be woven together by studying works of literature. Megan says it was in this class that she saw the gospel and biblical worldview applied to something she loved: childrenās literature.
Studying Childrenās Literature
Megan and Betsy (Matthews) Farquhar ā97 were both English majors at Covenant and bonded over their shared love of childrenās literature. Megan went on to study childrenās literature at Hollins College in the summers while earning a library degree at University of Iowa in the fall and spring. She invited Betsy to join her at Hollins one summer where they continued the conversation about Truth and Story that started in that Childrenās Literature class at Covenant. At Hollins, they wrestled together with Truth and Story as professors had them deconstruct stories they loved so well, like Little House on the Prairie. Their Covenant education equipped them to think critically and to filter what they learned through a biblical worldview. In fact, a big takeaway for Megan and Betsy from their days at Covenant is that any subject is open to study. Megan said, āWe learned to apply a biblical worldview to whatever we studied and read.ā This was especially true of childrenās literature. They always ask the question: What is the purpose of what is in the book? Betsy also says that her Covenant professor, Professor Ralston, prepared her well for success in graduate school when she had to write a ten-page bibliography to accompany her senior thesis project on George MacDonaldās childrenās literature.
Redeemed Reader Partnership
Fast forward a few years and they are both working together on a childrenās book review blog, applying Truth and Story to childrenās book reviews. Not long after starting their blog, they met the founders of a new website, Redeemed Reader, who were also doing reviews of childrenās literature, and Megan and Betsy were invited to join the team. Their website states, āweāre reading ahead for you so that you can confidently choose books for your children and teens.ā In their reviews, they tell parents any areas of concern to be on the lookout for and where a book may conflict with a biblical worldview. In 2016, Betsy took on a temporary role as managing editor and has remained in this role ever since. Megan serves as the associate editor.
Redeemed Reader continues to grow as they serve more and more families. These days they partner with Story Glory Kids (a group that provides book fairs to Christian schools) and Westminster Kids (a website that sells childrenās books). They also have a quarterly magazine. Betsy returns to the mountain each year to teach in Dr. Bagbyās Childrenās Literature class on the topic of book reviews. Megan recently published her own childrenās book on the topic of resurrection titled . And, next year, the Redeemed Reader team will release a book with Moody Publishers about the concept of Truth and Story.
Megan and Betsyās common love of childrenās literature set them on a path the Lord laid out for them. They were equipped by their education at Covenant to advance in their training and to help parents choose quality literature for their children to read. As it states on Redeemed Readerās , āBetsy and I are indebted to Ethan Pettit, librarian and Childrenās Literature professor from 17³Ō¹ĻAPP, who enlightened us so much in seeing Christ in literature and taught us to discern Truth and Story.ā
To learn more about Redeemed Reader and to read their latest reviews, .