With over 100 ratings on Goodreads, this one is coming in with 4 1/2 stars! ย Looks like everyone is loving this heartwarming story, which looks at both good and bad in this little Amish community.
*****
The Charmed Amish Life #1
by Shelley Shepard Gray
Releasing January 26, 2016
Avon Inspire
Blurb:
Shelley Shepard Grayโs first book in her Charmed Amish Life series is set in the quaint Amish village of Charm, Ohio, and tells the stories of the Kinsinger siblings who are each struggling to find both forgiveness and love in the face of tragedy.
Three months ago, everything changed for Darla Kurtz and her family. Darlaโs father was responsible for a terrible fire at Charmโs lumber mill which killed five Amish men. And though he, too, lost his life, the town of Charm hasnโt looked at her family the same since. Even Lukas Kinsingerโwith whom Darla used to have a close friendship.
Now her brotherโs anger at the town is spilling over onto Darla, and she has the bruises to prove it. The accident already cost five lives, but if something doesnโt change soon, Darla fears it will cost herโand her familyโeven more.
Lukas Kinsinger wants to mourn the loss of his father, but he can hardly find the time to breathe. Suddenly the head of his fatherโs lumber mill and responsible for taking care of his three siblings, heโs feeling the pressure. He has also never felt more aloneโespecially with the newย tension between he and Darla. But when he learns of her troubles at home, Lukas knows he canโt simply stand by and watch. Someone has to help her before another tragedy occurs.
As Lukas and Darla attempt to repair their families, they discover something deeper than friendship growing between them. But will Lukas and Darlaโs love be accepted after so much loss? Or will the pain of the past overcome any chance of future happiness?
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*****
Excerpt:
Chapter 1
March 20
It was another picture-perfect day in Charm.
The sky was pale blue, quietly complementing the acres of vibrant green farmland as far as the eye could see. Spring lambs had arrived. They were frolicking in the fields, their eager bleats echoing through the valley. The morning air was not too chilly or too damp. Instead, a hint of warmth teased, bringing with it as much hope as the crocus buds that peeked through the dark dirt of the numerous clay pots decorating cleanly swept front porches.
It was the type of morning that encouraged a person to go out walking, to smile. The type of day that reminded one and all that God was present and did, indeed, bestow gifts.
In short, it was the type of day that used to give Darletta Kurtz hope. A day like this should have made her happy, revitalized her. It should have made her want to pull out a pencil and one of her many notebooks and record the images she saw and list activities she wanted to do.
It was the kind of day she used to love and maybe, just maybe, take for granted.
But now, as she rested her elbows on the worn wooden countertop that had no doubt supported generations of postal workers before her, Darla could only silently acknowledge that another day had come. It was sure to feel as endless as the one before it, and would no doubt be exactly like the rest of the week.
It was another day to get through. A way to pass ten hours of expected productivity before she could retreat to her bedroom and collapse on her bed. Only then would she feel any sense of peace. Because only then would she be able to wait for oblivion. Sheโd close her eyes, fall into a peaceful slumber, and, hopefully, forget her reality for eight hours.
It had been ninety-nine days since her father died. Tomorrow would bring the one hundredth. It was a benchmark sheโd never intended to look forward to. Wearily, she wondered if anyone else in Charm was anticipating the milestone as well.
Undoubtedly some were.
After all, her father hadnโt been the only man to die in the December fire at Kinsinger Lumber Mill. No, he was one of five. And though it wasnโt as if sheโd ever forget that fact, there were many in Charm who took care to remind her constantly.
Just then, Mary Troyer pushed open the door to the post office. Darla braced herself.
โYou have a lot of nerve, Darletta Kurtz, getting a job here,โ Mary said as she slapped a ten-dollar bill on the counter. โItโs bad enough that your family stayed in town. Most folks would have left in shame after what your father did. Yet, here you are, thriving.โ
Each word hurt, as Mary no doubt intended for them to. Darla thought she would have been used to the verbal abuse by now, but it still felt as jarring as it had the first time. Maryโs son Bryan had died in the same accident as Darlaโs father, and she took every opportunity to make sure everyone in town was aware of her pain.
Just as she had two days before, Darla did her best to keep her voice even and her expression impassive. โWhat is it youโll be needing today, Mary?โ
Maryโs cheeks puffed up before replying. โOne book of stamps. The flags.โ
Quickly she gave Mary the stamps and her change, taking care to set the money on the counter so their fingers wouldnโt have to touch. โHere you go.โ Thenโthough she would have rather said something, anything elseโshe added the words sheโd heard her boss say dozens of times: โDanke for coming in.โ
Mary narrowed her eyes. โThat is all youโre gonna say?โ
It was obvious that Mary was itching for a fight. But no way was Darla going to give it to her. Sheโd learned at least a couple of things in the ninety-nine days since the accident at the mill.
And even though she might be wishing Mary to perdition in her darkest moments, she knew it was always best to turn the other cheek. โThereโs nothing to say. Your mind is made up to be angry with me.โ
โMy โmindโ has nothing to do with the facts. Everyone in Charm knows that your father caused the fire at the mill. That fire killed my Bryan, Clyde Fisher, Paul Beachy, and Stephen Kinsinger.โ
Standing as straight as her five-foot-two-inch frame allowed her to do, Darla added quietly, โYou forgot John Kurtz, Mary. My father died, too, you know.โ
โAll of us are struggling with our losses. Struggling to make ends meet with our men gone. But here you are almost every morning, standing behind this counter with a smile on your face.โ
Though Mary wasnโt the first person to say such a thing to herโshe wasnโt even the twenty-firstโDarla still didnโt understand why she should bear the weight of her fatherโs guilt.
Especially since it had been proven that it hadnโt been just her fatherโs negligence that had started the fire in the Dumpster. A variety of circumstances had taken place, which, when combined, had created a powerful explosion.
A rag, dampened by a flammable liquid, had been tossed into a Dumpster filled with wood scraps and hot metal that had been left heating over the course of the day. In no time at all, the rag had burst into flames, igniting the pine kindling. Before anyone was truly aware of the fire, the Dumpster had exploded, causing the nearby wood stacks in the back warehouse to catch fire, too. Though the emergency sprinklers had come on and the fire department and ambulances had been called, five people had died and scores of others had been injured.
Without a doubt, it had been the worst disaster to ever occur at Kinsinger Lumber Mill, and everyone whoโd been there was marked by the terrible tragedy.
After the accident, fire marshals had investigated and declared that it had been caused by a series of unlikely events: a rare sunny day in December, hot metal in the Dumpster, and a pile of pine that someone had discarded instead of turning into wood shavingsโall set ablaze by one rag.
No single person was to blame.
Furthermore, when Stephen Kinsingerโs son Lukas had taken over the mill, heโd publicly forgiven her father. However, the speech had done little to change the general feeling of anger and hurt that pervaded their village. It seemed that everyone needed a scapegoat. And her father had given them one.
Now, because John Kurtz was no longer walking Godโs earth, more than a couple of people had transferred their pain and anger onto Darla and the rest of her family.
And after ninety-nine days of it, sheโd had her fill.
*****
Shelley Shepard Grayย is a New York Times and USA Today bestselling author, a finalist for the American Christian Fiction Writers prestigious Carol Award, and a two-time Hold Medallion winner. She lives in southern Ohio, where she writes full-time, bakes too much, and can often be found walking her dachshunds on her townโs bike trail.
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*****
Giveaway:
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*****
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