The book opens in 1931 during the Great Depression. Anna’s husband Eli has recently passed leaving her to cater to their brood—eight children between the ages of 16 and three years old—on her own. With little money and no job at hand, this seems like a daunting task.
Despite the obstacles she faces, her faith in God is unwavering. While she sells some of her farm animals to pay bills, her children help out one way or another on the farm. They milk the cows every morning and every evening and hauled the heavy milk cans to the drive for the milkman.
She’s worried that they’d run out of potatoes 🥔 before the next yield season which isn’t for another five months So she prays to God to give her strength. Her pride won’t let her ask the church deacon for help.
One morning, while the family gathers for breakfast, she notices her barn raising has caught fire. Quickly, she dashes to the barn with her older children to put out the fire and rescue her animals. She wakes up minutes later after passing out from smoke inhalation.
In the meantime, Dan Beiler, a widower with six children—whose wife died from pneumonia—is on his way to the hardware store when he notices plumes of smoke from the barn and later, the sound of the fire alarms from a distance. He follows his horse to Anne’s farm and finds her barn burning. He sees lying on the grass surrounded by her children and offers to carry her inside.
For some reason, he can’t seem to get Anne out of her mind following their encounter.
Days later, as Anne recovers in the hospital, the community helps out—her church has helped rebuild her barn, her mother and sisters stay with the children, her father provided cows and her plants are thriving. She’s touched by their kind gesture.
She often wonders about the stranger who carried into her house. Or maybe it’s just her imagination.
As spring turns into summer, Anne is back to her daily grind: chopping wood, doing her laundry picking vegetables and canning them in mason jars and storing them in the cellar. She does her chores alongside her brood and pays little attention to her appearance or folks who pass judgement at her.
One day, she receives a letter ✉️ with no return address. The letter is from a Daniel Beiler. He writes to introduce himself and then gets down to business; he wants Anne to be friends and would like to know her better. He suggests a date and asks if this sits well with her.
She cries after reading the letter. All the memories of her loss come back in waves and she has no one to turn to. She’s even tried praying but doesn’t feel her prayers have been answered.
After waiting for months and no reply, in the autumn, Daniel Beiler writes her another letter. This time she agrees to meet with him.
After a few dates, he proposes and they agree to get married in March the following year. So far they’ve informed only their oldest children of the news.
After the wedding, they’d have to move to his farm since his house was larger and would accommodate all of them. Anna realizes how blessed she is to have such a wonderful man by her side, someone who can help take off some weight off her shoulders.
The More the Merrier is a touching story of love, resilience, and family. The sense of community is so strong and the characters are warm and relatable. Highly recommend if you’re looking for a light-hearted christian-themed Christmas romance novel.
A word of caution though—this book will leave you famished so have some snack at hand while reading.
Thank you to Linda Byler, NetGalley, and Good Books for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.