Falling to Pieces by Vanetta Chapman
Tuesday, September 20th, 2011
Jenny Bontrager is finally at a place of love and belonging with her husband, Matthew, and his children. Life seems golden with both her family and career as a writer.
But everything Jenny now believes in is thrown into question with the discovery of a long-lost letter from her father. Her sense of peace and contentment destroyed by betrayal, Jenny struggles with her renewed faith–and the love of everyone around her.
My Comments: I love this writer even though I don’t find the stories realistic. I have a difficult time believing that love would help someone give up all of the conveniences we have in the English world because two characters have done that. Having said that, I love the stories, I love the writing, and I have a difficult time putting this series of books (Quilts of Lancaster County) down once I begin reading. Happy endings inspire my day and give me hope for the future. Please if you know more about the real Amish life than I do, let me know if there is a shred of realism in these books. As I said, however, I am quite able to suspend disbelief while reading, a because I enjoy the story line and maybe realism isn’t all it’s cracked up to be.
Twenty-two-year-old Skeeter has just returned home after graduating from Ole Miss. She may have a degree, but it is 1962, Mississippi, and her mother will not be happy till Skeeter has a ring on her finger. Skeeter would normally find solace with her beloved maid Constantine, the woman who raised her, but Constantine has disappeared and no one will tell Skeeter where she has gone.
Aibileen is a black maid, a wise, regal woman raising her seventeenth white child. Something has shifted inside her after the loss of her own son, who died while his bosses looked the other way. She is devoted to the little girl she looks after, though she knows both their hearts may be broken.
Minny, Aibileen’s best friend, is short, fat, and perhaps the sassiest woman in Mississippi. She can cook like nobody’s business, but she can’t mind her tongue, so she’s lost yet another job. Minny finally finds a position working for someone too new to town to know her reputation. But her new boss has secrets of her own.
Seemingly as different from one another as can be, these women will nonetheless come together for a clandestine project that will put them all at risk. And why? Because they are suffocating within the lines that define their town and their times. And sometimes lines are made to be crossed.
In pitch-perfect voices, Kathryn Stockett creates three extraordinary women whose determination to start a movement of their own forever changes a town, and the way women-mothers, daughters, caregivers, friends-view one another. A deeply moving novel filled with poignancy, humor, and hope, The Help is a timeless and universal story about the lines we abide by, and the ones we don’t.
Everyone needs a safe place to call home
When her mother passes away, Ella’s forced to auction off her family’s farm. Her father died years ago, and she could never manage the fifty acres on her own. But after she moves to town, she can’t deny the pain she feels watching the new owner, Loyal Weaver, repairing her family’s old farmhouse—everything Ella had once dreamed of doing.
What Ella doesn’t know is that Loyal secretly hopes she will occupy this house again . . . as his wife. He begins inviting her over, to ask her opinion on changes he wants to make. As their friendship blooms, Ella starts to wonder about Loyal’s intentions, especially when her best friend, Dorothy, hints that Loyal is not who he seems. There’s no way the golden boy of their close-knit Amish community could be interested in Ella, long the wallflower, hidden away caring for her ailing parents.
Should she trust the man she’s always yearned for, or the friend who’s always been by her side? When one of them threatens to disrupt the independence she’s finally achieved, Ella is faced with a choice. She can protect her heart and keep things the way they’ve always been. Or she can come out of her shell, risk everything for the love she’s always wanted, and finally have a place to call home.
My comments: Shelley Shepard Gray is one of my favorite writers of Amish fiction. Her books keep me engaged from beginning to end. I love this series! The characters, although Amish, are easy to relate to. I can especially relate to the fears and concerns of Ella. She’s not sure who to trust, who to believe, and her self-esteem is low. She is lonely and devastated when she has to sell the family farm, and at best finds it difficult to watch somebody else outside of the family fix it up. It’s fun reading about how her life changes. I look forward to other books by Gray including the third book in this series. It’s fun keeping up with the characters.
READ NUMBER ONE:
Bestselling author Wanda E. Brunstetter brings you three historical stories of finding room for love. Glenna Moore is desperate after she watches her gambling father jump hurriedly from the back of a moving train. Will a young reverend bring stability and love back into her life? Judith King’s life as a new schoolteacher takes an unexpected turn when a widowed father begins to captivate her thoughts. Will she muster enough courage to seek his love? Bev Winters’s job is an answer to prayer until her boss complicates her widowed life. Will her pride allow love after loss?
READ NUMBER TWO: The Healing
Seek a fresh start with Amish widower Samuel Fisher as he journeys from Lancaster County to Bluegrass Country, hoping to find a balm for the grief he’s carried with him. Will this single father, burdened by yesterday’s memories, discover a new and perhaps better life in Kentucky, the land of tomorrow? Esther Beiler, who helps watch Samuel’s children, develops a crush on Samuel and a true affection for his kids. Can she win his heart, or has she already lost it to an English woman? How will God untangle star-crossed lovers when jealousies and misconceptions threaten to tear them apart?
My Comments:
Both of these are classic Wanda Brunstetter. I enjoy her books and always know I will be entertained with a clean read.
I’m not a huge fan of short stories, but Love Finds a Home is a perfect book for moms of little ones or people who don’t have time to read longer books. Quality is there, short stories are not developed enough for me personally.
The Healing is a sweet romance between two unlikely (to find each other) people. Reading this book enhances my desire to visit an Amish community and I find out there is one close to where my mother lives! Next summer here I come (or hopefully sooner).
The Healing comes out the beginning of September.
Travel to Plain City, Ohio, to witness the Mennonite and English culture clash. As Katy Yoder accepts a new job and struggles to define her place in the world, childhood friends and a past romance get in the way. Even when her friends try to help her change her judgmental attitude, Katy is certain that seeing things as black and white is the only way to please God. But as love softens her heart, slowly shades of gray seep into her world, and she discovers the right answer isn’t always the easiest one.
My Comments: Great book, especially for those who struggle with staying in the center and would prefer legalism, or strictly adhering to a set of rules. It is always difficult to look at things individually and choose based on the circumstances, situations and people involved. Others don’t always understand or respect our convictions, so we need to make sure they are worth defending. Katy, the main character, is probably like many young girls raised in a more fundamentalist home. I’d have to say in my late teens and early twenties I was much like Katy. Problem with this is the self-righteous nature can easily take over. I guess at times I became impatient with Katy, and her behavior brought back memories I would rather forget. This book is great! I look forward to more by Dianne Christner.
Emma always put the needs of others ahead of her own. When will it be her turn to be treasured?
Adam was her first love and best friend. But then he went away. Determined to experience the freedom of living in the Englisch world, he left Emma heart-broken. How could he have chosen the world over her?
Now Adam is back in Middlefield and Emma can’t seem to keep him away from her family’s farm. But this time she’s determiend to guard her heart. It might be love that keeps him there . . . or perhaps just guilt.
When a newcomer arrives in town and shows an interest in Emma, she dismisses Adam’s insistence that she be cautious. All this attention is new to her and she doesn’t know quite how to accept it. Emma knows her Heavenly Father treasures her. But will her new beau?
My comments: I enjoyed this book and read it rather quickly. The characters are not pristine, there are quite a few flaws, which made the story engaging. In fact one of the main characters had serious faith issues, and another was not physically beautiful – she was heavy. The romance built nicely, and faith was strengthened throughout. The women were independent thinkers and also worriers (true to life!). The characters were able to see beyond a person looks like to the real character inside. These books make me want more and more to visit Amish country. I recommend this book!
This book will be published early August. I received an e-galley from NetGalley.
Bestselling author Mindy Starns Clark and coauthor Leslie Gould offer readers The Amish Nanny, Book 2 in the Women of Lancaster County series, which tells the stories of young Plain women as they explore their roots, connect with family, and discover true love.
Amish-raised Ada Rupp knows it’s time to make a commitment to the faith and join the church, especially if she wants a future with the handsome Amish widower Will Gundy.
But when she has the chance to travel to Switzerland as the caregiver of a young child, she leaps at the opportunity.
Anxious to learn more about her forebears, Ada enlists the help of a young Mennonite scholar named Daniel, but even as she develops feelings for him, she cannot get Will from her mind—or her heart. At a crossroads, Ada must decide what she is willing to give up from the past in order to embrace her future.
My comments: This was a very different type of Amish book. I enjoyed it, but it was missing the usual Amish vibe. Maybe this was missing because of the setting (Switzerland). I don’t really know. It seemed that this group was more progressive than other Amish people I have read about. I have never read about the Amish traveling, especially by plane, nor have I ever heard of or read about an Amish nanny. I still enjoyed this book and read it quickly. If you are looking for a more traditional Amish read, this book isn’t it. However, I recommend it as a good, interesting and thought-provoking read, especially in the summer.
When Susannah goes to Dakota territory as a mail-order bride she finds something she never dreamed she would—true love.
With no prospects for marriage and her parents recently deceased, Susannah Underhill agrees to go west to the Dakota territory to marry her minister’s homesteading brother, Jesse. But Susannah is painfully shy, doesn’t see herself as worthy of love from either a husband or from God, and lives in constant fear that Jesse is going to ship her back to Detroit.
In spite of her petite size and the fact that Susannah doesn’t look like she could survive on the prairie, Jesse quickly discovers that his new wife is a greater blessing than he even hoped for. The years she spent as her father’s veterinary assistant allow her to save Jesse’s ox and twin calves and to help neighboring farmers with their animals.
But Susannah’s feelings of unworthiness are deeply rooted, and she can’t believe that Jesse’s praise—or the tenderness and love he shows—could possibly last. The thawing of her heart seems almost as distant as Spring in the midst of the winter blanketing the Dakota prairie.
My Comments: It’s been a while since I’ve read a historical fiction novel. I enjoyed this book quite a bit. I love the main character, Susannah, a proper eastern lady with a few traumas in her life and her silly, fun, affectionate and anything but proper mail-order husband Jesse. I couldn’t help but love Jesse. He was fun, lived out his faith, and oh so talkative. He grew up in a large, loud, loving family. Susannah grew up with unaffectionate parents as an only child. Wow, these two are about as opposite as you can get! However, as their story unfolds it clearly becomes obvious that God has a plan for these two, and they are clearly meant for each other. This book gave me a feel for what it might have been like for homesteaders – the hard life and the mixing of many cultures. I loved the Christian aspect of this book and the part it played in the story.
This book will be published soon by Thomas Nelson. I received an advanced copy from NetGalley. Thank you NetGalley!