I picked this book up in Lancaster, PA on a trip to Amish Country with my mother and grandmother. This looked very intriguing to me, so I bought it.
I read the book over the course of about a week and a half. It should have been a MUCH quicker read, given the fact that the writing is simplistic and the story itself is only borderline decent.
This book is over-long, given the subject matter. To make a long story short, this book is about infanticide in an Amish community, which happens to go unsolved for about 50 years.
The story is told in 1st person narrative by various members of the community, who each give their individual take on the crime. Chapter by chapter we hear from a different person recounting past and current "Amish Times", if you will.
This made the book difficult to read, in that it was next to impossible to keep track of all of the characters. I kept a running list, because not only did the narrative shift back and forth between characters, the time was constantly moving forward, which meant that new characters (mainly children of previous characters) would be introduced as they stepped up to tell their part of the story, but there is little to no explanation of who THEY are; you are left to keep track for yourself.
I think that nearly a 3rd of the book should never have made it past the cutting-room floor. I got the feeling that the author was subtly trying to defend the Amish religion a lot of the time, but not doing a very good job of it. It came across as a very harsh and unforgiving religion, although I am sure that is not always the case.
I had the "whodunnit" pegged long before the ending, despite all of the attempts to throw in a twist here and there. So the ending was very unsatisfying for me.
I ended up giving this a 2-star rating because it was an interesting look into the day-to-day Amish lifestyle in the early to mid-part of the 19th century, but the story itself certainly could have been better planned and better written.