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A Christmas Miracle de Beth Wiseman

de Beth Wiseman - Género: English
libro gratis A Christmas Miracle

Sinopsis

Mary is twenty-seven years old and already has five young children. Married to her husband at age eighteen, she wasn’t quite prepared for motherhood, and exhaustion and frustration are sending her into a downhill spiral as the holidays approach. Too proud and ashamed to ask for help, Mary’s situation begins to take a toll on her marriage. But when an elderly man in a red suit and his sidekick elf befriend Mary, showering her with wisdom and advice, she must choose to accept help, learn to cope with her situation, and ultimately find the true meaning of Christmas.


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A beautiful collection of Amish Christmas novellas that will warm your heart. Each novella is written by a well known author of Christian Fiction. Beth Wiseman, Kathleen Fuller, Barbara Cameron and Kelly Long all have shared very special Christmas novellas that will bring tears to your eyes and joy to your heart. I'm not going to review each one but my most favorite of the four novellas was A Miracle For Miriam by Kathleen Fuller.
I've had this book in my library for a quite a while and I'm just now reading it. After I finished it and enjoyed it so much I wonder why I waited so long to read it. I highly recommend it to all readers of Amish Fiction. I hope that you will consider adding it to your TBR Christmas books. christmas-books8 s Jessica77 1 follower

Not sure to rate this book two or three stars. It was definitely ok, and actually better than many of the other books I would rate two stars, but I wouldn't go so far to say I actually d it, either. I guess I should rate it 2 1/2 stars? Anyhow, I agree with another reviewer that says it is basically Hallmark movie special in Amish community. Cute and sweet, but terribly cliched. I guess I'm just getting tired of all these formulaic christian fiction Amish novels. This may seem really rude, but I can't seem to put a better way to say it other than it is a stupid harlequin romance novel for christians, quite preachy and without sex. I'm also a getting annoyed at the religious aspect of these novels a little bit too. Although I am a christian and enjoy a bit of Christian fiction (most particularly, Francine Rivers), these books are starting to feel a little elitist and snobby to me - that is the Amish lifestyle is superior and the "true" faith. As an example, in the two out of three books, when the leading male character leave the Amish community, they both get involved in a host of bad stuff, including drugs and alcohol, and lose their faith for a while. I did appreciate the fact that in the second book, Daniel did meet a nice Catholic woman outside the faith, but was miffed that in the first Seth met no decent people outside the Amish community - all his friends cared less when we was in the car crash. This seems a bit harsh, and as is is not the first time amish books I've read have done this I'm starting to get annoyed. Just write a sweet book about the amish without having to be so preacy or condescending to the outside world, especially since the majority of readers are from the outside world anyhow! 6 s Laura314 1 follower

3 Amish Christmas stories. The 3 stories link together. The first 2 may be read in either order as their timeframes overlap. The third story is the conclusion to the book--its story is mentioned in the other 2 a number of times.

A Miracle for Miriam by Kathleen Fuller
3 1/2 stars
Miriam is plain and thinks of herself as an ugly duckling. She wants to get married and have a family, but she doesn't think anyone will ever find her attractive enough to marry.
Seth was Miriam's school crush. He broke her heart by laughing at her and making fun of her when he found out. He was arrogant and selfish in his youth. Now he is older and after spending time in the Englisch world and getting into a car accident that leaves him scarred, he wants to change.

Lesson: Inner beauty, Humility
A nice story about inner beauty. A little too overdone on the "ugly duckling" part, though. A slight bit preachy on the humility side, too.

A Choice to Forgive by Beth Wiseman
3 stars
Daniel left the Amish life 18 years ago. He devastated Lydia whom he had promised to marry. She went on to marry his brother and have 3 wonderful children. She is now a widow and Daniel has chosen to return to the Amish life. He not only want forgiveness, but needs it from Lydia.

Lesson: Forgiveness
This one was okay to me. Daniel seemed a little too forgiving to me while Lydia was very unforgiving when she thought she was forgiving. This one also seemed to be a bit more preachy than I expected.


One Child by Barbara Cameron
2 1/2 stars

As Sarah and David celebrate Christmas they are also remembering her miscarriage one year earlier. They have yet to have any children and Sarah is saddened by the loss and anxious to be pregnant again.
On Christmas night and Englischer couple arrives at their home stranded in the snowstorm. Sarah and David take them in and are surprised to find the woman, Kate, very pregnant. They are both concerned for the couple, but also about each other and their own feelings about the pregnant woman.

Lessons: Acceptance, Faith
My least favorite of the book. For personal reasons (I am very familiar with miscarriage, infant loss, and infertility), I felt the story was just too overdone. Grieving a miscarriage is one thing, but Sarah and David handled it terribly. The "holier than thou" attitude they had made it seem they should have handled it much better.

A lot of this story annoyed me. It just doesn't seem it was written by someone who understands infertility or loss. The last paragraph was decent, but it didn't make up for the failings of the rest of the story. I admit I didn't it for mostly personal reasons, but if you have dealt with issues me, you probably won't it either.2009 amazon-vine anthology ...more2 s Mayda3,306 57

These four novellas will definitely give you a warm fuzzy Christmas feeling. Though there is some strife in the lives of these Amish women, it’s a pretty safe bet it will all work out in the end. The stories are somewhat connected, written by different authors, and contain some of the same characters but having a different focus. The stories are sweet, almost to the point of being trite, and message that one must trust in God is foremost. The audio narrator was a bit over the top, but if you a narrator is really performing the parts, this is the book for you.amish christian christmas ...more2 s Sara418 14

In this anthology of heartwarming Christmas stories, three of the best writers in Amish fiction combine their talents to create three intertwined novellas of faith, love, forgiveness, and the joy of the Season. In each story, one of three young women, friends in a tightly knit community, find a way to love again. First, Miriam must find inner strength and forgiveness when the man who broke her heart finds his way back to her a broken man. Next, young widow Lydia must find a way to forgive the man who left her - and let go of her anxieties for her children and herself. Finally, Sarah's encounter with an Englisch couple desperately needing help will force her to face her fears and let go of her pain in order to find a deeper love with her husband.
A lovely collection to read around Christmas. I look forward to reading "An Amish Second Christmas" next year!adult-fiction christian-fiction christmas ...more1 Elizabeth Meadows1,893 261

I had read three of these novellas previously in other bind-ups. I enjoyed them again, plus the one that was new to me. They are sweet and heartwarming.

audio-books-2018 big-books-2018 christmas-books1 Gaylina320 7

Loved all of these books! 1 Leslie76 8

I listened to this book on Hoopla and I really enjoyed it. There was a great theme of forgiveness tied into each of the holiday stories. I thought it was a great message for the Christmas season!20241 LauraAuthor 39 books644

Title: AN AMISH CHRISTMAS: Expanded Edition
Authors: Beth Wiseman, Kathleen Fuller, and Barbara Cameron and Kelly Long
Publisher: Thomas Nelson
August 2010
ISBN: 978-1-59554-878-8
Genre: Inspirational/Amish/Christmas

It’s Christmas time in Paradise, Pennsylvania, and four Amish couples experience hope, redemption, and new life.

A Miracle for Miriam – by Kathleen Fuller. Miriam has been in love with Seth since they were in school together, but when she was fourteen, Seth stomped all over her heart. When he grew up he left the Amish faith. But now Seth is back, and he seems to be interested in pursuing a relationship with Miriam. But Miriam is having nothing of it. After all, she’s still the same four-eyed, ugly beanpole he made fun of when they were kids. Can Seth convince Miriam that in his eyes she is beautiful?

A Choice to Forgive – by Beth Wiseman. Lydia has built a life for herself when her fiancé Daniel vanished one Christmas eve. She married Daniel’s brother Elam, and they had three children. But now Elam is dead, and Daniel is back, and he’s asking Lydia for forgiveness and a second chance. Lydia doesn’t believe she’s capable of providing either. How can she go back to normal life with her long lost love as her neighbor?

One Child – by Barbara Cameron. Sarah has wanted a baby for as long as she’s been married, but her pregnancy ended in miscarriage. Now a very pregnant woman and her husband are stranded at Sarah’s house during a blizzard, and the Englisch woman is in labor. Will Sarah be able to accept the responsibility of carrying for someone so very different who has the one thing Sarah wants?

Christmas Cradles – by Kelly Long. Anna Stolis has gone to relieve her aunt of her midwifery duties for the night so she can get away. But there are three women expecting. Anna’s aunt arranges for Asa Mast to stay in the barn just in case there is need of Anna acting as midwife. Sure enough, the first call comes and Anna and Asa take off in a blizzard to deliver a first child. With God’s design three babies are born that night and Asa finds a new hope for his life. But is it enough to make her give up her own practice and stay to help her aunt?

AN AMISH CHRISTMAS: Expanded Edition is a collection of four Amish stories, written by four very different women. I absolutely loved this collection, though my very favorite story is A Miracle for Miriam, and my second favorite was A Choice to Forgive. Really, it was tough to choose between the two. I enjoyed the third story too, but it didn’t read as smooth as the first two, and at times seemed a bit of an information dump. The fourth story I read later when this expanded edition came out, and it was a totally sweet story of new life and love.

If you Amish stories and or Christmas stories, you will not want to miss AN AMISH CHRISTMAS. Hardcover, with an absolutely beautiful cover, this book is also wonderful for gift giving. Plus discussion questions and a couple Amish recipes are included at the end of the book. $16.99. 522 pages.



1 Damla23 3

Actually, I didn't know much about the Amish people and their lifestyles until I read this book. They live without electricity, without technology, TV, internet, etc. un the modern city people. They are against using them, but they are happy with this.
In "An Amish Christmas", which consists of four novellas written by different authors, you will find love of people as the main theme, but this love is told in a God-oriented and religious way through the light of Bible. The book tells how a good man should be: humble, grateful, faithful, nice, kind, patient, valuing inner beauty... Throughout the book, these virtues are emphasized.
Although the first three novellas were written by different authors, they have a common feature; the characters of the stories. The characters know each other. For example, when you read any novella, you realize that the main character is a relative or friend of the main character of the other novella. I found this very interesting.
When you read the book, you'll see that the core of the book is to believe in God to endure all the pains of life in any condition. Despite being not a very exciting and escapist book (except "One Child", where I was curious to know how the woman would survive the birth at home), and although it took a long time for me to read it, I generally the characters inside.
In the book, there are some "different" words that the Amish people use, and at the beginning, you'll find a glossary for them. Also, at the end of the book, there are some delicious Amish recipes you can cook after reading this nice book.1 Pastoralmusings105 5

An Amish Christmas is different in that it is a book of three novellas. It is also different in that there are three authors.

It is an amazing little book, though. The pleasures of the Christmas season is tempered by heartache, yet sweetened by hope. The three stories all speak of the same Christmas. The cast of characters is essentially the same in each story. The location is the same, too.

Each story focuses on a particular subset in the cast of characters. Each of them has their struggles, griefs, and hardships. The stories point us to the fact that joy, hope, and confidence can be found in spite of the difficulties of life.

There’s something endearing about Christian fiction that is set in the Amish culture. The authors attempt to be accurate in their portrayal of the Amish. They are certainly accurate in their portrayal of human nature. Of special note is the fact that they do not shy away from Christian truth and simply write a good, clean book in a religious setting. Christian truth and its claims on people saturate these novellas.

All in all, I believe that the average reader of Christian fiction would greatly enjoy this book.1 Leah1,924

I d three out of four of the stories; the fourth story was okay. The stories that I d were A Miracle for Miriam , A Choice to Forgive, and Christmas Cradles . These were interesting stories with characters that I d. All of the stories involve First Christmas (Christmas Day), which I was expecting but still enjoyed. They don't celebrate it the same way I do, which was interesting. 4 stars for each of those stories. The other story, the one that I thought was okay, is One Child . I didn't the characters, but it was a nice story. 3 stars for this story.1 Martha56 2

An Amish Christmas is a very uplifting novella. The authors are brilliant at creating characters that readers are able to relate with and deliver messages that helps the reader to grow spiritually and to be entertained by the talented authors writings.1 Rj200 5

This is a 3 story novella. I am only reading the first story. A Miracle For Miriam. I could not find it listed separately on this site. Well I did end up reading all three. They were sweet stories but I wasn't blown away by any of them. 2010 amish christmas1 John86 2 Read

returned to the library unfinished (read one of four stories)........victim of holiday blues...... 1 Tanya95

The stories in this book are sweet, but they aren't the best Amish fiction I've read. If you want to turn off your mind and be entertained, this is a great book!1 Lori30 2 Read

Enjoyed listening to this book 1 Angieleigh797 121

I have to say that the Amish collections that I've read lately aren't exactly other Amish fiction that I've read by other authors.

Un other stories, the Amish are shown as being just as flawed as Englishers - including gossiping, judging, and partaking in behavior that isn't always innocent. I was a bit surprised that the men paid much attention to the curves of the women's bodies, kissed them passionately, and even were found in a bedroom with a single woman. There are no graphic scenes, just behavior that surprised me.

I nearly added this to my DNF shelf as I was very annoyed that the focus of the first story seemed to be about how everyone found Miriam to be plain or very ugly. It was no wonder she was jaded and standoffish!

The second story surprised me as I was expecting something completely different than what actually happened. I did find myself tuning out at times, but also invested in what had happened in the past and how they worked past it. There was even a time or two when I cried.

The third story nearly broke my heart as it deals with miscarriage and trying to get past it even a year later. As the synopsis doesn't include what happens, I won't spoil the story, but it was my second favorite of them all. I also teared up a time or when reading this beautiful story about brokenness and healing.

The fourth was my favorite as it was about a midwife. I am slightly obsessed with Call the Midwife and this was about a modern day albeit Amish midwife. I was surprised that the husbands in all three births that Anna attended were in the room, or close by, when their wives delivered their babies.

Three of the four stories were interconnected with characters that were found in the previous story, with the exception of the first one. Two of the stories dealt with a horrible snowstorm that rocked Lancaster. As someone who lives close to Lancaster, Pennsylvania, I can vouch for the fact that we could get a horrible snowstorm and there are times when within an hour or two after it stops that it warms up and the snow starts to melt.

We have very interesting weather here in southern PA.

All four stories deal with redemption, forgiveness, and second chances. While I wasn't always invested, I was entertained and don't regret forging ahead after Miriam's story.

2019-reading-challenge amish audiobook ...more1 Andi431 8

I still can't figure out why I periodically crave these books. I guess it's something about the sweet, simple fantasy life where everything happens for a reason and no problem can't be solved with a little prayer and a whoopie pie. If books are brain food, these things are Wonder bread. But every so often, I me some sugary refined carbs, so here we are.

A Miracle for Miriam: The conflict here is pretty thin. Her entire sense of self-worth is shattered because a boy made fun of her once in middle school? Um. I d the character arcs in principle -- Seth learning humility and compassion, and Miriam learning to have confidence, those are both solid stories -- the foundation just wasn't enough to support them.

A Choice to Forgive: The conflict here was so contrived, just...wow. It's a second-chance romance, but the reason for the initial separation was simply ludicrous. And the constant wild assumptions leading to miscommunications when any reasonable adult would have just asked what was going on and it would have been a non-issue -- ugh.

One Child: This one was solid plot-wise, and also had the most emotional depth by far. Sarah and David were realistic, sympathetic characters, and it was satisfying watching them support each other and grow closer. Unfortunately, it was also the most explicitly preachy, with several passages of dialogue and narration clearly shoehorned in to make make a spiritual point. I don't mind at all reading about religious people being religious, but as a non-religious person myself, it's a big turn-off when the author is transparently preaching at me through the text. Ironically, one of these passages explicitly addresses the fact that the Amish don't proselytize and instead simply live their faith and trust that to be sermon enough; would that more of the evangelical authors of Amish fiction would learn that lesson.r-christian romance Annette898 26

Summary:
An Amish Christmas holds 4 stories.
1. A Choice to Forgive by Beth Wiseman is the story of a young widow named Lydia. She has 3 children. A man who she once loved re-enters her life.
2. A Miracle for Miriam by Kathleen Fuller is the story of a young woman who doesn’t feel pretty. She actually has low self-worth. A young man who once meant a great deal to her when they were younger is now interested.
3. One Child by Barbara Cameron is the story of a young couple struggling with infertility.
4. Christmas Cradles by Kelly Long is the story of two women who are mid-wives in the Amish community.

My Thoughts:
I want to 1st begin by saying I am not an avid Amish fiction reader. This is not a genre I enjoy reading. I visited my sisters in the region west of Houston a few years ago. I was browsing in an old general type store in Fayetteville, TX. This signed copy book was for sale in an area marked out for the author Beth Wiseman who lives in this town. An Amish Christmas has been in my TBR stack a few years.

My favorite story is A Choice to Forgive for several reasons.
1. I feel this is the most well-developed story. It is longer.
2. The main characters have a long history that has a “present” offering a reopening. But, in reopening, old wounds must be healed.
3. Lydia is a cautious person. After all, she has 3 children who depend on her, plus she is dealing with past betrayals.
4. I have empathy for her. I feel an investment in her story because I can relate. She is believable and real.
5. Lydia is heroic because she is a single mom with 3 children. One of them is a teenage daughter with her own issues.

One of the reasons I am not a fan of Amish fiction is the characters are often too squeaky clean. In An Amish Christmas, I feel the authors try to show a believable and imperfect side of the Amish people. Some more than others.
Rating: Good for A Choice to Forgive. The other 3 stories are okay.
Source: Self-purchase. Kristie Leaphart280

This book is actually 4 books in one. They are stand-alone novels but also all within the same Amish community at the same time period.
A Choice to Forgive:
Daniel disappeared long ago in Christmas Eve and Lydia, the young Amish girl he was courting was crushed. Daniel's brother eventually began courting Lydia and they made a happy home together with three children, until his death. Now Daniel is back and Lydia must decide if she can forgive him and let him back into her heart.
A Miracle for Miriam:
When Miriam was young Seth shattered her heart enthusiastic he made fun of her in front of the school. Years later, after Seth returns, will he be able to show Miriam that she's no longer "plain" to him.
One Child:
After a miscarriage last Christmas, Anna and Daniel are struggling, and God brings strangers to their home during a Christmas Winter Storm to show them his Grace and Mercy.
Christmas Cradles :
Anna takes over for her Aunt on Christmas night as the area Mid-Wife. A neighbor, Asa, is available to drive Anna on any calls. Then, a winter storm, multiple deliveries, and a connection that neither of them expected. Brianna (Breathe, hope, books)248 8

2.75 so rounding up to 3

My mother-in-law gave me this book for Christmas last year, and the good book nerd and daughter-in-law i am i made myself read it, even though i was pretty sure Amish fiction was not my thing.

And while i now know a lot more about Amish culture, and i thought these stories were fine, i can also say with absolute certainty that Amish fiction is NOT MY THING.

There’s being formulaic, and then there’s being predictable. I knew exactly what was going to happen in all but the final story, and the final story was just super repetitive. Yes, these are technically novellas and therefore, there isn’t that much development. But i still found these stories TOO LONG. I’d learn about the characters and they’d get together or do their problem and then the story would KEEP GOING. I would get so bored! I enjoyed most of the stories, but i was also ready for each of them to be over.

Slightly better than the last Christian book Barbara gave me though, so that’s something i guess.audiobooks-i-ve-listened-to Janet330 1 follower

A Choice to Forgive by Beth Wiseman ****
I’m going to just say it…this novella was the perfect opener to this collection. I’ve yet to read anything by this author that I haven’t absolutely fallen in love with. And with one small caveat, this novella is no exception. An unexpected, heart rending, 18 year old blast from the past walks through Lydia’s door one night just before Thanksgiving. Her first love, the man who left it all behind and broke her heart on Christmas Eve (no less) eighteen years prior is back. Back to reclaim his life in his Amish roots. Back to tear her heart into little pieces all over again. Back. She thought she had moved on, actually marrying his brother Elam and raising their three children alone after Elam’s passing two years prior. Back to remind her that her heart is not truly healed. I loved that this story occupied it’s time in the weeks between Thanksgiving and Christmas. I loved that there was no need for time hops and epilogues. However, it crushed me a bit that there was the insta-love between Lydia and Daniel. I mean I get it, they had once loved each other enough to chose to be engaged. I get it, they had a deep history. But 18 years people! Eighteen years that was wrapped up in a big, ginormous, festering lie. A lie that Elam never corrected, mind you, though he’s not here to deal with the fallout. I can understand forgiving his lying cowardly self. I can understand choosing friendship and a we’ll see approach. I just couldn’t live with declarations of love so quickly. That’s my caveat. The one thing I couldn’t get behind in this otherwise amazing novella.

A Miracle for Miriam by Kathleen Fuller *****
This story, oh gravy this story is what all novellas should hope to become. Added bonus points because it picks right back up where ‘A Choice to Forgive’ with the same family, the same community and a side-by story line. It’s rare to find novellas with overarching stories. Let’s add in that a horse in this book garnered it own paragraph to explain why it was named Gravy. Technically Biscuits ‘n’ Gravy but still. It’s Kathleen knew me personally and Gravy was just her way to include me in this story, I mean if of course we don’t look at the analogy of me as a horse or the fact that she doesn’t know me. But still, it’s what I want to think right now! The author tackles some tough subjects in this novella that are done so gracefully and perfectly without trying to be more than what it was intended to be and without leaving me feeling I missed something. There was a lot of baby steps toward healing old hurts, there was a lot of let’s see where this could take us, there was a lot of forgiveness. There wasn’t a lot of neat tied up endings without the need for after thoughts. We don’t know where Miriam and Seth ended up, for sure. And that is perfectly OK. The depth of character building and back story was so perfect that I could have kept right on reading about their lives through their own series.

One Child by Barbara Cameron ****
I loved that story picked right up where ‘A Miracle for Miriam’ left off. This collection is so very different than other novellas which endears me to it more. Sarah and David have featured throughout the stories as a local couple who lost their baby to miscarriage the previous Christmas Eve. They are hosting First Christmas for family and friends at their home and as their guests leave before the storm blows in they prepare to settle in for the night. Until a pounding on the door takes David out into the snow to rescue a family whose car has slid off the road in the storm. A husband and his very pregnant wife. This novella was filled with so much love and healing (for Sarah especially) and truth. Englishers with preconceived ideas about the Amish. Misunderstood ideas about gender roles within the Amish family. This story begins and ends in less than 24 hours. That 24 hours provides healing for Sarah and David, growth for Kate and Jason, and new friendships for everyone. Here’s the situation, however, it was only 24 hours but it dragged on and on and on. Jason was all over the place. Sarah was bound in her own private world that she didn’t share outside her husband. Kate, oh yeah well I won’t spoiler it but it’s kinda a given ya know… However it took her getting up and down and going here and there and drinking a LOT of tea to get there.

Christmas Cradles by Kelly Long ***
This book is partially a continuation of the previous three novellas but not as intertwined. The same community, the same Christmas storm, and three new couples that were new. If there were mentioned in the previous stories I didn’t get a feel for them I did in the previous novellas. Anna is in town for just a day or two to cover her Aunt’s patients while she goes to visit her family. Oh yeah, the are both midwives. The flu, which apparently is stealthing through the community through all the novellas, has changed a bit of plans when the man to stay with her and drive in the event she was called out is down with the flu so he son comes in his place. Long story short it was insta-love. I enjoyed the interweaving of the cradles (as featured in ‘One Child’) and quilts that draw the story together. However I felt the characters weren’t developed with any depth, answers were given too easily, and insta-love. I feel this novella was destined to be something amazing but due to a shortage of available pages got cut down and it lost a lot of somethings in the translation. It was still an amazing conclusion to ‘An Amish Christmas’ in the community at Paradise on a blizzarding Christmas night.

I was provided a complimentary copy of this book by Kathleen Fuller. I was not compensated for this review and all thoughts and opinions expressed are my own. I was not required to write a positive review.

Originally published at https://fizzypopcollection.com/an-ami....2017-read amish-mennonite-fiction christian-fiction ...more Romantic Intentions Quarterly186

HAVE YOU READ? AMISH BOOK REC

An "Amish Christmas: December in Lancaster County" gives us four tales of Plain Christmas in the community of Paradise, Penn. A favorite is Kathleen Fuller’s “A Miracle for Miriam,” in which the self-conscious, uncertain Miriam finds it in her heart to forgive former bad boy Seth, newly returned to the community after a fairly serious comeuppance—and newly appreciative of true inner beauty. However, the introduction of a bereft, expecting Englisher couple to the house of heartbroken Sarah and her husband David, nearing the anniversary of a tragic miscarriage, is very informative about Amish ways. Meanwhile, Kelly Long’s “Christmas Cradles” gives us a midwife heroine driven around on a snowy Christmas Eve, and falling in love amid all the new life...

This rec appears in Romantic Intentions Quarterly #3 - October 2018 Jo-Ann Fitzgerald750 1 follower

This is a set of short stories within a Amish group. The first two are about two couples who had a prior relationship - one while in school and the other who had a relationship which the hero walked away. The third book I found myself identifying with the couple who had a miscarriage and were having problems moving forward. The last story was about a midwife and a man helping her over Christmas deliver babies and end up finding each other.

I've read these before but didn't recognize the title until I started to read the stories. All the hero's and heroine's are relatable and likable. Although the books have an Amish reference it doesn't go overboard with the descriptions. Each story was unique. There are short but sweet reads.reviewed Melody144 16

I loved that all novellas in this collection are related. All four take place in Paradise, Pennsylvania, and the characters from the first three stories cross paths and are secondary characters in each others stories. It made this collection feel more one book rather than four separate ones. The four authors each have their own writing style, but they blended beautifully together.

I enjoyed the four stories very much; so much so I couldn't pick a favorite. They were all filled with faith, love and hope. I would recommend An Amish Christmas to all Amish fiction fans. It's a delightful holiday read.29-nov-2029-360 amish-shaker-quaker-etc cfd-bingo-2017 ...more1 Rena241

This book was easy to read and had four distinctly different stories.
A Miracle for Miriam - Seth comes back to the Amish family he left but not the same arrogant man he was. Can he have a life & can Miriam ever forgive him.
A Choice to Forgive - Daniel returns asking Lydia to forgive him. Can she?
One Child - Grieving over not having a child when a couple due to having their first child is stranded on the side of the road. How these two couples share one memorable Christmas.
Christmas Cradles - Amish midwife on Christmas Eve delivers multiple babies and falls in love all at the same time.
Great stories but predictable but still a fun read. Each book can stand alone.free-reading aubrey32

first novella: 3/5 stars
second novella: 3.8/5 stars
third novella: 3.5/5 stars
fourth novella: 4/5 stars

Overall Rating: 3.5/5 stars

This is the first Amish book I've ever read, and it wasn't too bad. I truly and thoroughly enjoyed it. I don't know if I would read it again, but it was worth the read. I think Amish living is very interesting.

To be honest, I could not be Amish due to the fact that being jealous is considered a sin in their community. They would immediately shun me. Also, having 1 kiss scene in a novella hurt terribly, lol.

I now know to expand my Amish novel collection! 3-5-stars 500-pages books-read-in-2023 ...more Melanna696

I just put a bunch of Christmas books on hold in october with no idea what they were.

This is the kind of book you can recommend to the ladies at church. But totally not my cup of tea. It’s 4 novellas in one. And they are so over the top ridiculous in how quickly these “romances” come together (literally days and sometimes hours) with exactly zero depth. “Hey you’re Amish. Me too. Let’s get married.” There isn’t actual tension or predicaments that cause any sort of pull into the story. They are the neatest and most tidy stories one did ever read.2022-read LaShunda506 1 follower

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