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Showing posts with label Amish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amish. Show all posts

Growing Up Amish by Ira Wagler

So, it's religion day here. If you don't want to read about the problems in the Catholic Church, you can read about Ira Wagler's memoir, Growing Up Amish. It's packed with details about Amish life, but, ultimately, it's the story of a young person searching for answers, and faith.

Ira Wagler grew up in an Amish home, the ninth of eleven children. His father, David, was known worldwide in the Amish community, one of the few with a degree, and a passion for writing that he shared in a magazine he launched, Family Life. But, while he poured his energy into his writing, some of his sons couldn't live the Amish lifestyle, with no cars, no electricity, no telephones. And, some Amish communities were stricter than others. Wagler commented, "Even among the Amish, other Amish seem odd."

Wagler tells his story, and, briefly, that of his brothers and sisters. An older sister left home, and became a Mennonite. When Ira was ten, he says of his mother's second son, "Jesse was the first of her sons to pack a bag and simply walk away into the night. He would not be the last." Ira's youngest brother, Nathan, walked away in broad daylight, with his mother crying behind him. That's why so many of the Amish young people leave during the night, so as not to listen to their mothers' cries. Ira walked away from the Amish life five times, the last time for good. And, four times he came back, afraid to leave the life he knew, while he feared eternal damnation if he left. He always felt a tug-of-war between the Amish world and the English world, the outside world.

Novels of Amish life are popular because the outside world wonders about the people and their lifestyle. Now, Ira Wagler reveals what it was like for a restless young man to grow up in that culture, a strict environment filled with complex rules and restrictions. It wasn't the place for a softhearted, sensitive soul, a young man who craved freedom. He provides the details readers crave about life, the family life, the church, the school, the community. But, he also tells the sad story of a young man who tried to succeed in that world, but had to walk away for the sake of his sanity.

Once you've read Ira Wagler's account, that book cover becomes a more powerful image. I'm sure Wagler meant his memoir to show that he succeeded. He found answers, faith, and comfort in life. At the same time, that's still a lonesome image, the Amish young man walking away. And, Growing Up Amish is still a sad, and lonely, story.

Ira Wagler's website is www.irawagler.com

Growing Up Amish by Ira Wagler. Tyndale House. ©2011. ISBN 9781414339368 (paperback), 288p.


*****
FTC Full Disclosure - I picked up an ARC in the reference room at our Main Library.

Breaking Silence by Linda Castillo

P.L. Gaus and Linda Castillo both set their Amish mysteries near Holmes County, Ohio. They both write fascinating books, but they're worlds apart. While Gaus' books delve into the culture, Castillo's books are more violent, with that violence focused on the Amish. The third book in Castillo's series,  Breaking Silence takes Police Chief Kate Burkholder into a world of hate crimes and murder, with the Amish at the center of that world.

When sheep are violently killed on a farm, Burkholder doesn't know if that act of violence was just directed at the gruff woman who lived there. But, the sheriff of Holmes County is worried enough about crimes directed at the Amish to call for help from the Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation. Fortunately Agent John Tomasetti is the one sent to Painters Mill, Ohio. He and Burkholder worked well together on two previous cases, and their troubled pasts have drawn them closer to each other.
 
By the time Tomasetti arrives, Burkholder has a scene with multiple deaths on an Amish farm. Three people from one family died in a manure pit where there's danger of methane gas. Four Amish young people are left orphaned, breaking Kate's heart. When the coroner concludes that one of the men was murdered, she's determined to find answers for those children. Are these deaths connected to the rash of hate crimes in the county? Or, did someone intend to kill the Slabaughs? Somehow, Burkholder must find a way to break through, convincing someone in the Amish community to talk.

Once again, Castillo shows that violent crime can find its way into the peaceful Amish community. The character of Kate Burkholder is an excellent vehicle for these crime novels, a law officer who left the Amish life herself, a woman who understands the community, but can no longer be a part of it because of her own violent history. She's a police officer forced to face violence every day, but she faces it with her heart, and, sometimes raw emotion. Breaking Silence may be about breaking the Amish code of silence, but it's also about Burkholder breaking her own silence, revealing more of herself to Tomasetti.

Castillo's Amish crime novels are violent thrillers with a fascinating protagonist. Breaking Silence will draw you into Police Chief Kate Burkholder's world in Ohio's Amish country.

Linda Castillo's website is www.LindaCastillo.com.

Breaking Silence by Linda Castillo. St. Martin's Minotaur. ©2011. ISBN 9780312374990 (hardcover), 320p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - The publisher sent me a copy of the book, hoping I would review it.

*****
Personal note - I just returned from Ohio where I read a newspaper article about Millersburg, Ohio, the heart of Amish country, where 150 Amish men and women turned out for a meeting with law enforcement to discuss the invasion of meth into their community. Although no Amish had been arrested, the crimes associated with meth were beginning to affect the Amish. As much as they would like to remain separate from the world, the world is finding a way to invade. The novels by Castillo and Gaus examine crime and its impact on Amish life.

Clouds without Rain by P.L. Gaus

P.L. Gaus' understanding of the Amish culture brings his mysteries to life. The third novel in his series, Clouds without Rain digs deep into a contemporary problem, the loss of farmland and the displacement of Amish families.

The story opens with Professor Michael Branden working undercover as an Amish man, trying to flush out the teens who were robbing the Amish as they drove their buggies. His unproductive day ends with a radio broadcast from Sheriff Bruce Robertson at the site of a violent accident involving a jackknifed truck, an Amish buggy, a couple cars, including a deputy's, and a fire. In trying to rescue the deputy, Robertson is critically injured by the fire, leaving Branden, newly deputized, to work with the rest of the department in the investigation. It isn't long before Branden learns the dead Amish man was a wheeler-dealer, a man who owned land in three counties, including land he had just taken away from eight Amish families. The land transactions brings Pastor Cal Troyer into the situation, the third man in the friendship with Branden and Robertson. Troyer, one of the few English trusted by the Amish, works closely with a local bishop, Andy Weaver, brother of that Amish land owner.

While the police look one direction in their investigation, Branden searches for answers to the questions about the land deals. And, when a local banker disappears, the professor knows he's on the right track. Is it possible that accident wasn't really an accident?

Gaus' mysteries of the Ohio Amish-Country are always fascinating, with the glimpses of that unusual culture. In this one, he deals with issues of the loss of land, the loss of the Old Order as many Amish turn to modern ways, and the trouble teens get into. Gaus manages to skillfully incorporate all of these elements into a mystery and the investigation by three men linked by their childhood friendship.


Clouds without Rain is another strong entry in this intriguing series. Anyone with an interest in Amish Country can learn a great deal from this author and series.

P.L. Gaus' website is www.plgaus.com

Clouds without Rain by P.L. Gaus. Penguin Group (USA), ©2011. ISBN 9780452296688 (paperback), 208p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - The publisher sent me a copy of the book, hoping I would review it.

Broken English by P.L. Gaus

P.L. Gaus originally published the books in his Amish-Country Mystery series with an academic press. Fortunately for readers, they're being republished a decade later by a mainstream publisher.  That's fortunate for those of us who enjoy intriguing puzzles such as Broken English.

It didn't take long for Jesse Sands to kill someone and plan a few robberies after he was released from prison in New Jersey. Somehow he found his way to Millersburg, Ohio, where he broke into Janet Hawkins' house. Despite her 9-1-1 call, Sands killed her before the police arrived. Then Sands was caught by a former security guard as he exited the house.


There's trouble, though, when Janet's father, David Hawkins asks to see Sands in jail. He's accompanied by Pastor Caleb Troyer, who witnesses Hawkins' eruption when Sands whispers something to him. David's disappearance only becomes a cause for alarm when a reporter is murdered. Sheriff Bruce Robertson's investigation reveals David Hawkins was former U.S. Army Special Forces. Robertson suspects Hawkins of killing the reporter to conceal his past, with plans to execute Jesse Sands.



That isn't how Robertson's best friends see the scenario. Cal Troyer knows Hawkins has given up a life of violence, and is prepared to become part of the Amish community, a peace-loving society.  When he asks Professor Michael Branden to look into the story, he knows he's pitting Robertson against the two of them, his childhood best friends. Now, it's up to them to prove the missing Hawkins isn't a killer, but someone out there knows Jesse Sands' secret.

P.L. Gaus' mysteries are quiet puzzles of human nature, perfect vehicles for stories involving Ohio's Amish.  Branden and Troyer are the men who understand the Amish people, accepted by them to help them deal with crimes that affect their communities. Sheriff Robertson represents the English world, the non-Amish, with a different view of the world, and of people. Broken English, like the previous book in the series, Blood of the Prodigal, skillfully brings together Amish life and these three men in a compelling story of mystery and conflict.

P.L. Gaus' website is www.plgaus.com

Broken English by P.L. Gaus. Penguin Group (USA), Pub date, 2010. ISBN 9780452296619 (paperback), 224p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - I bought my copy of the book.

P.L. Gaus for Authors @ The Teague

Paul L. Gaus has been studying the Amish culture in Holmes County, Ohio for thirty years, and he has thirty years of stories to tell.  It's too bad we only had forty minutes to hear the author of the Ohio Amish-Country mystery stories talk about his books. 









Gaus was born and raised in Ohio, and he has lived in Wooster, Ohio, for the past thirty-three years with his wife, Madonna.  His interest in fiction writing was a result of college classes he taught.  His students examined a variety of American cultures, and he often took students to Holmes County on field trips.  On the advice and encouragement of Tony Hillerman, he began working on mystery novels set among the Amish of Holmes County.  His first book, Blood of the Prodigal, was published in June of 1999, followed by five more.  However, the books are being republished by Plume, a division of Penguin Group (USA).  The series will be title The Amish-Country Mysteries.  Blood of the Prodigal, and Broken English have been released, with the others to follow, about once a month for the next four months.

Paul began by telling us if you want to meet the Amish in Holmes County, it's helpful to drive a sports car.  He described the countryside as rolling hills, with hardwood forests and creeks.  The Amish settled there because the land was similar to the farmland in Germany where they originated.

One fall day, Gaus drove his Miata convertible to Millersburg, the county seat of Holmes County.  He parked at the courthouse, an old stone building reminiscent of the old Carnegie libraries.  There's a red brick jail on the square, and a Civil War monument, common to small midwestern towns, and a patch of grass in front of the courthouse. 

While he was parked, a small Amish man came over to his car.  He was about sixty-years-old, dressed properly Amish with a blue denim outfit, a vest with hooks, not buttons, work boots, and a black felt hat.  He glared at Gaus in his Miata, and then started making jokes, bad jokes.  "How many horses are under the hood of that?"  "How many oats do you need to feed your horses?"  And, then he said he had a serious situation.  "How about you driving me to Nashville?"  Well, Gaus went to Holmes County to meet the Amish, and he thought the man only meant Nashville, Ohio.   But, would he drive him to Nashville, Tennessee if that's where he wanted to go?  He decided yes, but fortunately, it was Ohio. 

The man managed to get into the low seat in the Miata, and they headed out on the black top country curvy country roads.  When they went over a hill, and hit the straightaway, the man said, "Just so you'll know, I've always wanted to say I went 100 miles per hour."

Paul took Andy Weaver to a machine shop first.  And, he went in, talked to the man, made an agreement, and shook hands.  Once Andy was back in the car, he said to Gaus, "Fellow thinks he's hot stuff.  Spray a little gravel when you pull out."  It was like that all day.  They went to a carpentry shop, and Andy went in, made his arrangements, and came out.  They went to a leather shop, a wheel shop, a saw blades shop.  It was 11:30 at night when Gaus dropped Weaver off at the bus depot.

Andy Weaver travels around on Greyhound buses.  He buys broken down sawmills from Amish families, and has them hauled up through Holmes County.  He stopped at all the shops, because the sawmills will go to all of those shops to be repaired on their way to Weaver's home in Minnesota.  He makes a good living.  By the time he gets back to Minnesota, the sawmills are all sitting on his lawn.  He sells them to Amish families all over the country.  So, he's rich, but he never even bought Gaus lunch.  About 5:00, he did suggest to a family that they were hungry, so they did get an Amish cooked dinner at that house.

One day, clear out of the blue, Gaus answered the phone to hear Andy say, "How about if you drive me to West Virginia?"  Andy Weaver was living a proper Old Amish lifestyle.  He was in the sawmill business, and making a living.  He was probably a millionaire.  He couldn't farm anymore.  He had divided his farm among his sons. 

In Holmes County, Ohio, the land has disappeared, paved over, divided between sons.  Taxes are too high, and the cost of farmland is steep.   Young boys can't farm.  Middle-aged men have taken jobs off farms.  That's what will change the Amish society.  Twenty-five years ago, they would have said all people were intended to live as peasant farmers.  The Amish are set apart and cloistered from society.  But, things are changing out in Holmes County.  So, the Amish are moving to other states, looking for farmland, Kansas, Missouri, Iowa.

Asked about the Mennonites, Gaus said they're not the same, although they are similar.  They both rose in the 16th and 17th century in Germany.  In fact, the Amish are not the same.  There are twenty-five different types of Amish congregations in Holmes County.  The Amish try to be just like everyone else, so they're not considered prideful.  They call us "High and Mighty," because we dress as individuals.  To be truly Amish, they must submerge their identity into the identity of the congregation.

One summer day, Gaus parked the Miata on a ridge overlooking a pasture.  The hay was fresh mowed.  And, he was enjoying the view, when off in the distance he heard the annoying, growling sound of a weed-whacker.  Then, he heard that noise go behind the barn below, then the next building, and then it curled behind him, over his head, and swooped, and landed in front of him.  It was a radio-controlled airplane.  Down below was a ten-year-old boy, dressed in proper Amish clothing.  He waved the control box at Gaus to show he was the one who buzzed the car with the airplane.

When Paul went down to that farm, he found something peculiar at the driveway.  When he drove into the driveway, it broke the plane of an infrared beam, and down in the shop, a man knew to come out.  He was not farming, either.  Jonas had divided his lands for his sons.  He drives a buggy.  He's Old Amish, and he's not going against his Bishop's wishes. 

Jonas' first job off the farm had been doing electrical wiring in RVs in Indiana.  He became interested in electricity, and took correspondence courses to learn.  He studied electric circuits, passed that, and then studied electronics.  He continued to study, microelectronics, computer chips, all of it through the mail.  Now, he installs high-security system in English (non-Amish) homes.   In fact, Gaus had him put a system in his house.  So, Jonas goes all over the Midwest to install those systems.  He has a Buick station wagon and a chauffeur to drive it.  The chauffeur owns the car, and drives, because Jonas isn't allowed to drive. 

P.L. Gaus has been traveling Holmes County, Ohio for thirty years, studying how and why the Amish live the way they do.  So, he puts as much as he can about the Amish in his mysteries.  The Amish are pacifists, in fact the most convincing pacifists.  So, Gaus made a bargain with his readers that it was not going to be Amish people who committed murder in his books. 

The books feature three men, and the women in their lives.  There's Michael Branden, a professor at a small college, and his wife, Caroline.  There's the sheriff, and his wife, the Holmes County medical examiner.  And, there's the pastor of a small church.  So, Gaus' books are bout friendships in small towns in the Midwest.

And, he writes murder mysteries, because he likes them, and they say write what you like.  And, mysteries provide a great opportunity to illuminate a culture.  Tony Hillerman proved that with his mysteries about the Navajo.  Gaus writes about how Amish people lives, and why they live that way.  They have scriptural reasons for all of their choices.  They don't have electricity, cars, insurance.  They're exotic, although they're all plain as can be.  The Amish are immune to worries of ordinary life that we ponder.  They're set apart, and don't need us at all.

The first six books in the series were published by Ohio University Press, and they did fairly well in the Midwest.  For an author starting out, it was a good experience.  But, a Penguin editor has picked up the whole series for the Plume division.  In six months, all six of the books will have been reprinted.  The whole series will be available by February.  Gaus has written a seventh book, Harmless as Doves.  It opens with a confession to murder by an Amish twenty-year-old who confesses to his Bishop that he had just killed a man.  If it looks as if Gaus broke faith with his readers by making an Amish man a killer, it's because in the last couple years there have been two murders by the Amish. 

Paul told us there was an Amish man who borrowed the first book, Blood of the Prodigal, from a neighbor who had all of them.  He read it, liked it, and asked to borrow the next one.  He passed Broken English among his family.  When he borrowed the third book, he told the neighbor the books were so authentic, and to think they were all true.  When the neighbor told him they weren't true, he turned bright red, and went storming out.  He angry that they weren't true.  A few weeks later, he came back and apologized, but the Bishop in his district didn't permit them to read fiction.  Gaus took it as a great compliment that the man found them that authentic.

P.L. Gaus has made friends among the Amish.  One day, he walked down a steep gravel lane toward a red barn.  He was worn out, and hot, and he heard a high voice call out, "Drink of cold spring water?"  He heard it, but didn't see anyone.  So, he continued on toward the barn, and heard it again, "Drink of cold spring water?"  He went over to the barn, looked in and there was an Amish man, a dwarf.  he had a goiter on his neck the size of a football.  He was missing three fingers from an accident.  Gaus took some of his college students to meet him.  He was the happiest man Paul has ever known.  Everything he did was right out of the Bible, including the way he dressed, with suspenders, no leather belt.  

One of the Amish orders lives as close to the soil as possible.  They've never been to a city.  They have no bank accounts, shopping centers, pharmacies.  They see cities as evil.  They've dug in as peasant farmers.

There are other writers who tackle the Amish culture.  Linda Castillo approaches the culture from the outside.  Her character, a sheriff named Berkholder, is not particularly sympathetic to the Amish since she was part of that culture at one time.  In her books, the sleuth comes from without to solve the crime.
But, Gaus' stories start in Amish society, and draw you through it, so you can think of the mystery as the Amish do.  The seventh book in the series will be out this summer. 

Asked about the practice of dividing land between the suns, Gaus said the Amish manage their estates in order to control the behavior of the children; "I have land, and, if you live a proper life, you might get some of it."  It comes from the European tradition that land stays in the family, and pieces are given to the sons.  With the lack of land, fathers don't have as much leverage with their estates.

Paul was asked if the Amish had any sort of government or leaders.  He said they do have strict government policies.  A Bishop is in charge of a congregation.  Each congregation is entirely separate, ruled entirely by the Bishop.  They rule everything from how men cut their hair to how many pleats must be in a dress.  The Bishop also presides over religious aspects of life, baptisms, marriages.  They interpret the scripture.  They have authority over everything.  Gaus said that's why he was careful to say Andy Weaver and Jonas were both in compliance with the wishes of their Bishop.

There are 250,000 Amish in North America, and they're growing at a rate three or four times that of the English population.  A congregation usually consists of thirty families, including all the children.  And, you can drive through the county and see one-room schoolhouses.

How are the Bishops selected?  They're chosen by lot.  The person who draws the short straw becomes the new Bishop.  That's also based on scripture.  In the Book of Acts, the Apostles needed to select a new twelfth Apostle after Judas' death.  So, they drew lots.

But, they don't allow just anyone to become Bishop.  The nominate the best men in the congregation, those that are seriously versed in scripture.  They must have led a sober lifestyle.  There are four or five Bibles put in a room, and there's a slip of paper in one Bible, at the passage about the Apostles drawing lots.  The man who selects that Bible is Bishop for life.

Gaus knew a thirty-seven-year-old man who had just been elected Bishop.  He asked Paul all kinds of questions about the English and sexuality.  Some were so detailed it made Gaus blush.  The man apologized for making him uncomfortable, but said the kids see videos, and all kinds of things, and ask questions.  So, he had been looking for an English scoundrel to answer his questions since he didn't know how to answer the kids.

When someone in the audience expressed surprise that the kids had seen videos, Gaus said they all have cell phones under their pillows, although they're not supposed to.  But, they have access to cell phones because many of the Amish are so wealthy.  The tourist industry is vast and profitable in Holmes County.  The Amish sell everything - quilts, dry goods, baskets, desks, and other furniture.  Money runs in an underground economy.  It's not reported.  It's all cash, never in the bank.  The Amish have money.  They don't vote.  They do pay property taxes.  But, they don't pay social security taxes, and, if they don't have to, don't pay income taxes.

Asked whether the intermarriage caused any problems with disabilities, Gaus said there are a number of genetic problems.  There are hundreds of dwarfs in Holmes County.  There are some disorders that are known only among the Amish.  If you see gravestones, most are of children.  Life is dangerous on an Amish farm.  They have ancient farm equipment.

One question was about marriages, and Paul said most are not arranged.  But, the Bishops are aware of genetic danger, so young people are encouraged to travel to far-flung Amish communities in search of a spouse. 

People don't leave the Amish community very often.  Occasionally they are expelled, shunned, but not often.  The Amish retain more than 90% of their children.   They do answer census questions.  They won't vote for President or sheriff, though, because those people have the power to take a life.  And, remember the Amish are pacifists. 

P.L. Gaus' appearance on his tour for the Ohio Amish-Country Mysteries, was one of our most successful recent Authors @ The Teague programs.

P.L. Gaus' website is http://www.plgaus.com/


Blood of the Prodigal by P.L. Gaus. Penguin Group, (USA), reissued 2010. ISBN 9780452296466 (paperback), 256p.












Blood of the Prodigal by P.L. Gaus

P.L. Gaus' first book in the Ohio Amish-Country mystery series came out in 1999, but Blood of the Prodigal has been reissued.  I'm so glad it has been, or I might not have found this series of six books set in Amish Country in Ohio.  Gaus combines an intriguing mystery, an interesting trio of sleuths, and the Amish culture in a story that gets my "family recommendation."  That means, I liked it so much, I called my sister, and told her to read the book.

It takes a great deal for a Bishop of the Old Order Amish in Holmes County, Ohio, to leave his community, and seek out an outsider, someone "English," for assistance.  But, the disappearance of Bishop Eli Miller's grandson counts as a big deal.  He turns to a trusted minister, Pastor Caleb Troyer, but, with Troyer about to leave the country, he's going to need assistance from a boyhood friend, Professor Michael Branden.  But Bishop Miller isn't telling them everything, just, that they can't talk to the police, and they only have a short time to find Jeremiah, whose father probably took him.

Four days later, Branden doesn't know much.  "A young dreamer of a student put too tight a roll on his trouser cuffs and ended up a smoking, drinking, fast-living scoundrel who deserted his pregnant girlfriend, drove her to suicide, kidnapped his own son ten years later, and is being hunted by his father who shunned him, and by the girl's brother, who has vowed to kill him."  It seems life in Amish Country isn't quite as peaceful as we all imagine.

Branden and his wife work slowly to develop sources in the Amish community, but it isn't fast enough.  When the boy's disappearance leads to murder, the local sheriff is suddenly involved.  And, Branden's other boyhood friend, Sheriff Bruce Robertson, can't be taken lightly.  He may be manic-depressive, with mood swings when he's not on his meds, but he's a shrewd judge of character who has worked with the Old Order Amish for a number of years.  Now, can the friends put their knowledge together in time to save another life?

According to Gaus' website, his "extensive knowledge of the culture and lifestyle of the Ohio Amish comes from over thirty years of travel throughout Holmes and surrounding counties in Ohio, where the world’s largest Amish and Mennonite population sprawls out over the countryside near Millersburg, Wooster, and Sugarcreek. "  He brings that knowledge to this mystery, one that emphasizes the Old Amish culture and lifestyle.  At the same time, Blood of the Prodigal is a strong mystery, with interesting twists.  Blood of the Prodigal is a solid debut mystery, set in an interesting culture in our own country.  Broken English is the second book in the series.  I can't wait to read it.

P.L. Gaus' website is http://www.plgaus.com/

Blood of the Prodigal by P.L. Gaus.  Penguin Group, (USA), reissued 2010.  ISBN 9780452296466 (paperback), 256p.

*****
FTC Full Disclosure - Library book.

(And, a personal note.  I'm hosting P.L. Gaus for Authors @ The Teague on Wednesday.  I lived in Ohio for twenty-eight years, and I know so many of the locations in this book.  If you live in northern Ohio, and like mysteries, you might want to try this book.)