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352 pages, Paperback
Published May 6, 2025
This is a gentle story set in an Amish community and with a premise taken from You've Got Mail, with strong backnotes of Pride and Prejudice! Lois Yoder, Amish, single and mid-twenties is happy managing the local gift shop in Paradise, Pennsylvania, but her independent life is not at all to the liking of the local Amish Bishop, or her much older and married brother Jacob, both of whom believe she should be 'living under a man's authority' rather than making her own life. Even worse, Jacob is determined to marry her off to Nathan, a man Lois knows to be a violent bully.
Lois would do a lot to stay in Paradise, but does that extend to marrying a man she does not love? And what happens when Moses Lantz, a man she once fell in love with but who broke her heart, buys the gift shop Lois manages as well as the apartment above the shop which is her home?
Sparks fly, and not romantic ones, when the two are forced to work together. But meanwhile each has joined a letter-writing circle and find themselves unwittingly writing to each other - and finding an attraction forming.
I enjoyed this partly as I had a pretty good idea of how the story was going to unfold. There were elements I particularly liked, such as Moses' close relationship with his Azlheimer-suffering mother, and (SPOILER ALERT) the fact of Moses' adoption. Although I did find that oddly quick to resolve, given how many years had passed without him ever knowing anything about his birth family, or even that he was adopted at all.
This is also the first story set in the Amish/Mennonite community which has really put me off of the community. I strongly dislike Lois' brother and Bishop's determination to diminish her, and the way her independence seemed to threaten them. Although I loved Amy, I felt suffocated by the fact that her having four children under the age of four was completely normal, and that strong young women are routinely too exhausted for anything other than the immediate tough work of raising a large young family. Then there was Sara... a difficult character to connect with.
However I do like the overall storytelling, and the birding details within, and I also like the fact that the book shows that misunderstandings can cast a long and unfortunate shadow and that it's better to be open, even if it hurts.