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WaterBrook Multnomah Catalogs

WaterBrook Multnomah Publishers is pleased to present our catalogs through Edelweiss. If you do not have an Edelweiss account, you can set one up here. Please click on the links at the bottom of this page in order to access each span. Our catalogs are published three times a year and our spans include Spring, Summer and Fall. Check back for future postings of our next spans.

2016 Catalogs

2015 Catalogs

Frequently Asked Questions

Listed below are many of the questions we are asked most frequently. If you cannot find an answer to your question, please email info@waterbrookmultnomah.com.

PURCHASING

Q: I’m a retailer – How can I order books or set up an account?
A: For information on setting up an account, please fill out the webform on our “purchasing” page or call Sales at 1-800-603-7051.

Q: I’m not a retailer, church, or ministry, but would still like to buy books in bulk quantities?
A: Most WaterBrook & Multnomah products are available in special quantity discounts when purchased in bulk by corporations, non-profit organizations, and special interest groups. Custom imprinting or excerpting can also be done to fit special needs. For more information please call Sales at 1-800-603-7051 or fill out the webform on this [ … ]

SNEAK PEEK: Boo Who by Rene Gutteridge

“Knock knock.”
“Who’s there?”

Click here to download chapter one of Boo Who.

It appears that everyone in Skary, Indiana, is having an identity crisis of epic proportions–including the town itself. Once known as the haunt of the world’s most popular horror writer, Wolfe “Boo” Boone, Skary started losing tourist business after Boo abruptly abandoned his career. Now the little town with the big marketing hook is up a creek–and on the brink of bankruptcy.

Click here to download chapter one of Boo Who.

SNEAK PEEK: LISTENING TO LOVE by Jan Meyers

Love Is Calling. How Will You Answer?

Click here to read chapter one of Listening to Love.

One of our greatest desires is to know we are loved by our Creator. Yet the depth of our apprehension is often equally strong: If I listen, we wonder, what will God say? If I open myself up to blessings, what will God require in return? As we trace this line of thinking, the God of all goodness becomes, in our minds, the God of our worst fears.