I think this is my first Karen Harper, and it came to me in a bag of books from my mother-in-law, most of which I've enjoyed. But this was definitely frustrating, and I was happy when it was done (and it took me a while to finish--other books kept getting in the way). Here's the thing--if you have an adorable, feisty widowed Amish lady (who...aren't usually feisty, so that's your first red flag about how this book is going to go) and her two adorable Amish sons as the protagonists of this story, and you actually want to root for her to stay with her community, you have to actually GIVE HER AMISH PEOPLE IN HER LIFE TO CARE ABOUT. So the author tipped her hand at the role of the Amish in this book. Otherwise it's just a standard romance/murder-y novel with someone who happens to be Amish. Rachel was effectively isolated this entire story from everyone in her community save one young friend (who we barely get to know). I was looking for there to be real conflict about her feelings for Mitch, but let's be honest...there's no real conflict, because why would she want to stay Amish based on what the reader is reading? All of the Amish in her life seem awful and unsupportive, except maybe one young woman (and one is OVERTLY awful and potentially murderous, so that...didn't help). No one is in her life, none of the Amish wives are even characters. She's completely alone. And while I appreciated some of the little details included about Amish life, there were no Amish characters to care about besides Rachel and the boys (and everyone else basically treats her kind of shittily after her husband dies), so the reader is not rooting for that community in any way, which seems like an unfair fight.
And the killer was just VERY aggravating--in the end, they were totally nuts (like...no one else saw this in the 10 years they were hiding the murder?), and I don't believe they'd just go on an all-out killing spree at the finale because...bones weren't well hidden? And people might discover them? Lame. Just, frustrating, one-dimensional characters (poor Gabe basically got stuck being a babysitter) (although I liked Mitch well enough, but he was saddled with awful dialogue) behaving in unbelievable ways. And Rachel vascillated between plucky modern heroine and then someone didn't understand American idioms. I liked Rachel and I liked her boys--they just deserved a better story.