1. It was short; and
2. It's been sitting on my bookshelf for awhile.
I'm trying to work through a lot of the shorter books that I seem to continually purchase but never made the time for. At the same time, I'm feeling sort of listless in my reading of late and am irritatingly (to myself) unmotivated to dive into something deeper. I'm hoping to shake the mental reading fog here soon.
At any rate, I read Plain Girl
This is the story of ten-year-old Esther, who is Amish. Pennsylvania's compulsory school law is forcing Esther's family to attend the local public school. Of course, Esther's father doesn't want her to go, in part because she has an older brother who once attend the same public school and eventually left home because he became curious about the world outside of his immediate community. Esther attends the school, makes a friend she doesn't know if she is allowed to have, reconnects with her brother and has her horizons broadened as well.
The storyline sounds so familiar to us nowadays. There are true life stories being published about people who have left the Amish (like this one) and plenty of Christian fiction titles which obsess about Amish culture. Beverly Lewis seems to be the main instigator of this, although I believe most of her titles are adult works. In searching for Amish fiction written specifically for children, I found a children's title which was published prior to Plain Girl
Note: I'm not touching books about the Amish written for adults. Just those for children.
Had I not read any other book about the Amish, I probably would have found Plain Girl
And so I move on . . .
Totally unrelated to this book but a note of interest: Virginia Sorensen (after divorcing her first husband) married Alec Waugh, brother of Evelyn Waugh. Also, a lot of her books are purported to be Mormon-themed. (I just thought that was interesting.)
Hmmm. . . Having never read a piece of adult Amish fiction that I can recall, I think this might be interesting to me. Lulu read Miracles on Maple Hill last year (I think). I did read one of those leaving-the-Amish memoirs once upon a time and found it interesting. Anyway, thanks for the review.
ReplyDeleteAnd by the way, what did you read as a kid? :)
And after you introduce the kids to the Amish, you can bring the family to PAfor a visit. Educational trip!
ReplyDeleteI used to listen to some Amish books to kill time in the kitchen. But it really did get old.
PS The Amish now have their own schools. One room school houses...typically they only attend till 8th grade. Then they work...
ReplyDeleteVirginia Sorensen most certainly wrote several books about the Mormons, of which I've read one. I've read Curious Missy, Miracles on Maple Hill, Plain Girl, The House Next Door, Utah 1896, and Lotte's Locket. I own Kingdom Come, but haven't read it. I like Miracles on Maple Hill and Lotte's Locket best. I will not deny that the illustrators of these books may have tipped the scales, though. (Beth and Joe Krush and Fermin Rocker respectively).
ReplyDeleteIf one must select Amish children's books, I prefer Henner's Lydia and Yonie Wondernose.
I should point out that the edition of Plain Girl that I read was *not* illustrated by Beth and Joe Krush, although one apparently exists.
ReplyDeleteAlso, I preferred Lois Lenski's Shoo-Fly Girl (1963) to Plain Girl. Plain Girl felt like it had change the Amish (like many of the current popular Christian novels), while Henner's Lydia and Shoo-Fly Girl were more about letting you see how they lived without interfering too much with their lives.
Oh, and after you visit Annette in PA, you can head south to AL and visit us. We live about 50 miles or so from an Amish community.
ReplyDelete:)
Still not understanding the Amish obsession. . .sigh
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