Author David A. Fiensy Releases New History Book - The Archaeology of Daily Life
            
            	
            
            
             
 Author David A. Fiensy is pleased to announce the release of his new book, The Archaeology of Daily Life: Ordinary Persons in Late Second Temple Israel. 
 
  
            
			- (1888PressRelease) February 12, 2021 - Published by Cascade Books in December 2020, the book is already receiving rave reviews from readers and reviewers. 
 
 Ever wondered what it was like to live in the past?
 
 This book relies heavily on archaeology to describe the villages, houses, families, labor, diseases, life-spans, stature, and religion of the first century Jewish people of Israel, the time of Jesus and the early New Testament.
 
 Book Information:
 The Archaeology of Daily Life
 Ordinary Persons in Late Second Temple Israel
 By David A. Fiensy
 Publisher: Cascade Books
 Published: December 2020
 ISBN: 978-1532673078
 Pages: 388
 Genre: History
 
 About the Author:
 David Fiensy (Ph.D. in New Testament from Duke University) has taught in colleges for thirty years and participated in seven archaeological excavations.
 
 Contact:
 Website: http://www.davidafiensy.com
 Twitter: https://twitter.com/dfiensy
 Linked In: https://www.linkedin.com/in/david-fiensy-0614663a/
 Promo Link: http://bookbuzz.net/blog/history-the-archaeology-of-daily-life-by-david-a-fiensy/
 
 Purchase Links:
 https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1532673078/
 https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-archaeology-of-daily-life-david-a-fiensy/1137488938
 https://www.christianbook.com/archaeology-ordinary-persons-second-temple-israel/david-fiensy/9781 532673078/pd/673072
 https://www.indiebound.org/book/9781532673078
 
 PR by BookBuzz.net
 BookBuzz.net helps indie authors, hybrid authors, and small publishers promote and market their books. We also help with book reviews, publicity, and more. Let's Create Some Buzz For Your Book!!!
 http://bookbuzz.net/blog/history-the-archaeology-of-daily-life-by-david-a-fiensy/
 
 ###
space
             
			
			
         
        
        space