[Amish Millers Get Married Series 04] • Finding the Way

[Amish Millers Get Married Series 04] • Finding the Way
Authors
Hartzler, Ruth
Publisher
Ruth Hartzler
Tags
amish romance fiction , amish christian romance , amish romance , amish denomination , christian romance
Date
2014-12-24T00:00:00+00:00
Size
0.19 MB
Lang
en
Downloaded: 44 times

Books 4 and 5 in the #1 Best-selling Amish Romance series, The Amish Millers Get Married.

The bundle is available for a short time only.

Multiple All-Star Author recipient, the well known Amish author Ruth Hartzler, received the All-Star Book Award for January for the Top Selling books 11-20 on Kindle.

Ruth Hartzler has no grammatical errors in her books. She is a retired teacher and is meticulous about grammar.

The two books in this boxed set are vastly different from each other. The plots are nothing alike.

In this boxed set:

4. The Only Way.

Rebecca has started work at a B&B which has opened next door to the Millers. Sarah Beachy, an Amish girl from another community, has moved in with the Miller family. Rebecca is determined not to be the fourth Miller girl to marry the fourth Hostetler brother, so why is she so upset that Sarah spends all her free time with Elijah Hostetler? How will the arrival of the mysterious Amish man, Benjamin Shetler, change their lives forever?

1. Finding The Way.

It's one shock after another for Sarah Beachy. Firstly her strict father has sent Benjamin Shetler to Lancaster Country to force Sarah to come back home, and secondly, she finds out she is closely related to the Millers. Does Benjamin have reasons of his own for arriving in the community? Will the handsome but wicked Nash Grayson ruin Sarah's happiness?

About the Author.

Ruth Hartzler's father was from generations of what people refer to as "Closed Open" or "Gospel Hall" Brethren. Ruth's mother, a Southern Baptist, had years of struggle adapting to the cultural differences, and always cut her hair, which was a continual concern to Ruth's father's family. Ruth was raised strictly Brethren and from birth attended three meetings every Sunday at the Gospel Hall, the Wednesday night meeting, and the yearly "Conference," until she left the Brethren at the age of twenty one. Ruth still has close friends in the Brethren, as well as the Amish, both groups descending from Anabaptists. Ruth's family had electricity, but not television, radio, or magazines, and they had plain cars. Make up, bright or fashionable clothes, and hair cutting were not permitted for women. Women had to wear hats in meetings (what others would call church meetings) but not elsewhere. The word "church" was never used and there were no bishops or ministers. All baptized men were able to speak (preach, or give out a hymn) spontaneously at meetings. Musical instruments were forbidden, with the exception of the traditional pump organ which was allowed only if played in the home for hymn music. Even so, singing of hymns in accompaniment was forbidden.

Ruth Hartzler is a widow with one adult child and two grandchildren. She lives alone with her Yorkshire Terrier and two cats. She is a retired middle school teacher and enjoys quilting, reading, and writing.