
Prayers That Shake Heaven and Earth
$11.94

Advanced Prayers That Shake Heaven and Earth
$16.48

Extreme Prayers that Shake Heaven and Earth
$20.06

Higher Dimensions, Parallel Dimensions, and the Spirit Realm
Out of Stock

Kingdom Government and the Promise of Sheep Nations POD
Out of Stock

Awakened: Creation, Pre-Adamic Ages, and the Ancient History of the Human Spirit
$18.70

Noah's Ark and the End of Days
Out of Stock

Pummel the Devil: A Biblical Foundation for Spiritual Warfare
Out of Stock

Wounded by Leadership
Out of Stock
Daniel Duval’s titles read like a set of escalating instructions: start here, go deeper, don’t stop when it gets strange. The repeated phrase “that shake heaven and earth” frames prayer as an active force, something aimed, weighty, and consequential. Across Daniel Duval books, the emphasis lands on intensity and structure: prayer as a discipline you can build, extend, and push into harder terrain. A second thread runs alongside, a fascination with spiritual architecture. “Higher dimensions,” “the spirit realm,” “kingdom government,” these suggest a reader who wants a map, a vocabulary, and a way to think about invisible systems.
One of the clearest shapes in Dan Duval books is the ladder. The sequence from Prayers That Shake Heaven and Earth to Advanced Prayers That Shake Heaven and Earth to Extreme Prayers that Shake Heaven and Earth signals progression, not just more pages, but more demand. These are not books that treat prayer as a gentle mood; they point toward urgency, confrontation, and endurance, the sense that the work of prayer can be trained like a muscle.
The escalation to “Advanced” and “Extreme” suggests a curriculum: a baseline, then specialized work, then the edge cases where a reader wants language for situations beyond ordinary reach. Duval’s approach leans toward the concrete. Not “thoughts,” not “reflections,” but prayers, plural, specific, usable, built for readers who prefer a strong verb to a soft abstraction and who are comfortable with spiritual life described in terms of conflict, authority, and breakthrough.
The other side of Daniel Duval books turns from the act of prayer to the imagined terrain surrounding it. Higher Dimensions, Parallel Dimensions, and the Spirit Realm reads like a doorway into a framework, a way of naming layers of reality and placing spiritual experience into a larger model. The title borrows the language of “dimensions” and “parallel” spaces, terms with a faint scientific echo, then anchors them in explicitly spiritual territory. Kingdom Government and the Promise of Sheep Nations POD shifts again, from realms to rule, from atmosphere to administration. “Government” is a hard word that suggests order, hierarchy, jurisdiction, and responsibility, implying a blend of theology and civic imagination.
Daniel Duval books appeal to readers who want faith writing with edges, writing that assumes spiritual struggle is real, that language matters, and that prayer is meant to be practiced with intention. If you’re drawn to frameworks, the “dimensions” and “government” titles signal that kind of mind at work. If you’re drawn to direct, forceful petition, the “Shake Heaven and Earth” sequence is the obvious entry. If you’re looking to buy Dan Duval books, you can find good low-cost copies of Daniel Duval books on ThriftBooks.