From the Introduction

In September 2005, a new series called Supernatural premiered on the WB Network. The story of two brothers who hunted demons, vampires, ghouls, and every other kind of supernatural villain, Supernatural ran for an astonishing 15 seasons—327 episodes—before it wrapped in November 2020.

Twenty years later, Supernatural is still attracting new fans. You can find it streaming on Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime, and Apple TV. Its Facebook page boasts over 14 million followers. It has spawned a book series, a trivia game, a version of Monopoly, a cookbook, and even a coloring book. Supernatural conventions are held all over the world….

I came late to Supernatural. My daughter and her friends would gather in our basement all through high school to watch the series. It wasn’t until they all left for college—and I, Mom, finally got control of the remote—that I sat down to see what all the fuss was about.

The rest, as they say, is history. Supernatural had everything I could have asked for in a series: a great story, plenty of action, heartwarming relationships, and laugh-out-loud comedy, not to mention the top-notch eye candy playing the two leads. I became an instant fan.

But it wasn’t just the storylines and the acting that intrigued me. Supernatural’s treatment of faith and spirituality was different. As a person of faith myself, I’m accustomed to seeing my beliefs misinterpreted, caricatured, or worse by the entertainment industry. Supernatural didn’t do that. Its depiction of Christians and Christianity was generally respectful; its use of religious symbolism was subtle and believable

Supernatural features demons, vampires, werewolves, and witches galore. But at its heart, Supernatural is about family. It’s about us.

Supernatural stirred my soul and touched my heart. I hope this book will touch yours.