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There were two real-life accounts in the book that really resonanted with me. The first was the story of Sarah Winchester (Chapter 21 - Castles of Sorrow). Sarah was the heiress to the Winchester rifle fortune. However, when she came to understand how many people had been killed by her family's invention, she began a rapid descent into isolation and madness and guilt. An eerie example of how not to handle life's storms. The second account was of Eddie Rickenbacker (Chapter 24 - The Sacrificial Visitor). Eddie devoted time every evening feeding the seagulls at the pier. We are then told that a seagull was given to him as a sacrifice when his B-17 crashed into the Pacific Ocean during World War II. The crew had been floating in a life raft for a week and had run out of provisions. They were slowly starting to die. They were miles from land and life. Eddie prayed and asked for God to help. It was then that a seagull landed on his head. That seagull provided immediate food for the men and bait for fishing, and enabled the crew to hang on until they were rescued. Eddie and his crew survived the storm, and Eddie never forgot.