Horison writer launches her book to coincide with Women’s Month
The book touches on themes of displacement, royalty, responsibility and sisterhood by God's design.

Horison resident Eloise Scoble, recently launched her book titled Samurai Bride o coincide with Women’s Month and share lessons that are aimed at helping both men and women.
In a world rife with staunch feminism on one end, extreme misogynistic undertones on the other, and the ever-prevalent queen bee syndrome, it is difficult to find the balance of who we are supposed to be, and how we are supposed to function within a society that has made everything a gender war.
According to Eloise, Samurai Bride seeks to set the record straight and bring honour back to words such as obedience and submission, all the while empowering women to live strongly in their beauty and to add grace to their strength.

“The book touches on themes of displacement, royalty, responsibility and sisterhood by God’s design. It is not just about feminine wholeness – wholeness within herself and wholeness within her realm of femininity and camaraderie of sisterhood – but also about how we are called to fill the hole, and draw men back to who God has called them to be, by vacating seats that we previously felt compelled to fill,” said Eloise.
Although the book speaks primarily to the bride in every woman, the book is also for the man who wishes to understand activating God’s favour upon himself, his family unit and his future.
“There can be no bride without a groom. The lessons shared are aimed at helping both men and women find their designations and fill them uniquely, highlighting the dire need for seeking and committing to healing,” said Eloise.



