Maggie Lapp doesn't belong in a world of cars, cameras, and coffee shops. Though her eccentric Aunt Lavender is happy to have Maggie stay in her lavish, frilly home, Maggie longs for the plain clothes, horse and buggy, and friends she left behind. It's all Levi Mueller's fault. He is the reasons she was sent away from the community in Berlin, Ohio. He is the reason she has to go see English doctors and endure their tests. When Aunt Lavender hires a man to build a swing in her garden and Maggie sees Levi's Amish hat and suspenders, she knows he is not there by coincidence. Well, her romance-novelist aunt is not going to make a story out of her. Maggie is not about to be set up with a man who can't mind his own business. But will Maggie be surprised to find that her heart is even more stubborn than her head, and love more stubborn than all her attempts to avoid it?
Amazon bestselling author of over 35 books Kimberly Rae has lived in Bangladesh, Uganda, Kosovo and Indonesia. She rafted the Nile River, hiked the hills at the base of Mount Everest, and ate cow brains, just to say she'd done it!
Rae has been published over 300 times and has work in 5 languages. Kimberly Rae’s articles have been published in BRIO, BRIO & Beyond, Proverbs 31 Woman Magazine, Mature Years, Diabetes Health, SusieMag, Women of the Harvest, Clubhouse Jr., Keys for Kids, Insight magazine, and Woman Alive, the only Christian magazine for woman in the UK. She writes regularly for Regular Baptist Press and Union Gospel Press.
Rae has been interviewed on multiple radio shows, in several newspapers, on blogs, and once on television. Since the release of her bestselling novels on human trafficking and missions (STOLEN WOMAN, STOLEN CHILD, STOLEN FUTURE), she is a requested professional speaker on human trafficking--not just the problem, but how people can be part of the solution.
Rae also has a series of books on living joyfully with chronic illness (she has Addison's disease) and new books on trafficking: For Teens: Capturing Jasmina For Adults and Teens: Captive No More Someday Dreams