April 25th, 2024
Home | Log in!

Fresh Pick
A LETTER TO THE LUMINOUS DEEP
A LETTER TO THE LUMINOUS DEEP

New Books This Week

Fresh Fiction Box

Video Book Club

Latest Articles


April's Affections and Intrigues: Love and Mystery Bloom

Slideshow image


Since your web browser does not support JavaScript, here is a non-JavaScript version of the image slideshow:

slideshow image
Investigating a conspiracy really wasn't on Nikki's very long to-do list.


slideshow image
Escape to the Scottish Highlands in this enemies to lovers romance!


slideshow image
It�s not the heat�it�s the pixie dust.


slideshow image
They have a perfect partnership�
But an attempt on her life changes everything.


slideshow image
Jealousy, Love, and Murder: The Ancient Games Turn Deadly


slideshow image
Secret Identity, Small Town Romance
Available 4.15.24


A Simple Amish Christmas

A Simple Amish Christmas, October 2010
by Vannetta Chapman

Abingdon Press
Featuring: Annie Weaver
256 pages
ISBN: 1426710666
EAN: 9781426710667
Paperback
Add to Wish List


Purchase



"A touching story of how the true meaning of Christmas can help us overcome life's struggles."

Fresh Fiction Review

A Simple Amish Christmas
Vannetta Chapman

Reviewed by Viki Ferrell
Posted September 9, 2010

Women's Fiction Contemporary | Inspirational Amish

Annie Weaver is not sure she is happy with her life in Philadelphia, for this Christmas she finds herself longing for the simple life of her Amish family. She's here on her rumschspringe, a time the Amish give their young people to discover whether they want to be baptized into the Amish faith and stay in the community, or leave it for the Englisch way of life. While in Philadelphia, Annie has acquired some additional education and has become a registered nurse. She loves her job at Mercy Hospital working in the children's wing.

When Annie receives a call that her father has been in a serious accident, she doesn't hesitate to leave Philadelphia and return to Mifflin County and her family. Her dad will need a nurse to care for his broken legs and get him back on his feet to tend the farm. But will the Amish people accept that Annie has become a nurse? Their tradition dictates that girls get no more than an eighth- grade education. Annie is hesitant to tell anyone she is a nurse, but Samuel Yoder knows something is different about Annie.

Samuel is the resident medical expert in Mifflin County. He's not a doctor, but the people have called on him for over 10 years to help with their illnesses. He's always quick to tell them that if he feels they need professional care, he will send them to the Englisch doctor. Samuel feels an attraction to Annie, and it's not just because they share an interest in medicine. But Samuel is 10 years older than Annie and has had to overcome a great tragedy in his own life.

Will Annie be accepted by the community and be allowed to use her skills to help others? Will Samuel be able to find peace in resolving his feelings and allow someone else into his life? Annie and Samuel both search for answers in this debut novel by Vannetta Chapman. She has written an inspirational story of how understanding the true meaning of Christmas can help us overcome life's many struggles. This is a story about the importance of family and community that will surely touch your heart.

Learn more about A Simple Amish Christmas

SUMMARY

Annie Weaver always planned to return home, but the 20-year old RN has lived in Philadelphia for three years now. As her time of rumschpringe is about to come to an abrupt end, bringing for Annie an overwhelming sense of loneliness. She returns home and finds herself face-to-face with a budding romance with an Amish farmer and Annie has several important choices to make.

Excerpt

Annie Weaver threw her coat and scarf into her locker, slammed it shut, and twirled the lock—once, twice, three times as Jenny had shown her.

Turning to go, she nearly ran over her best friend. “Tell me you are not headed out on the floor.” Jenny’s voice sounded like Annie’s first-year teacher—stern and low and slightly disappointed. Sporting short blonde hair and a figure even slimmer than Annie’s, Jenny looked nothing like an Amish schoolteacher.

“I’m not?”

“You are, aren’t you?”

Blue eyes laughed at her, even as Annie tossed a panicked look at the clock—six fifty-seven a.m.

“Ya. Why?”

“Cap.”

Annie’s hand flew to the top of her head and met only a mass of curls. Searching, she found her nursing cap slid to the back and side of her head.

“Scope.”

Looking down, she realized she’d left it—

“I.D.”

Left them both in her locker.

As she turned and fumbled with the combination on her locker, Jenny re-pinned Annie’s nursing cap firmly in place on the top of her long, chestnut hair.

“I’m running late,” Annie explained.

“Sleep in?”

Annie shook her head. “I was up early enough, but I made the mistake of turning on the radio. The music reminded me that it’s December.”

“They’re already playing Christmas songs,” Jenny fussed. “I still have leftover turkey in the fridge.”

“When I heard the music I realized I hadn’t written home this week. I thought I had enough time, but then a letter to my parents was followed by another to my schweschder.” Annie’s voice trailed off. How could she explain that the Christmas decorations popping up everywhere were making her homesick?

Garlands hung from the halls of her boarding house.

Colorful displays crowded the store windows lining her walk to work. Lights blinked above the streets, and Santas rang bells at nearly every door.

She longed for the simple celebrations of home.

Home.

Annie grabbed her I.D. and stethoscope, allowing her fi ngers to brush over the engraving, marveling that it bore her initials.

She had actually earned her R.N. degree. One year she had studied and earned her high school equivalency, then for two years she had been enrolled in and graduated from the local nursing program.

Three years of living with her aenti.

Three years working among the Englisch.

Three years away from her family.

She spun around to face Jenny. “I shouldn’t have spent so long writing my mamm and dat this morning, but ya—I was a little homesick because of the holidays.”

“Your mother and dad will appreciate the letter. Why don’t you stop by my place after your shift ends? I’ll make baked ziti, a giant salad, and fresh rolls—your favorite meal.”

Annie blinked through the tears that suddenly sprang to her eyes, accepted the hug Jenny offered, and hurried out to the floor, glancing again at the clock as she passed underneath it.

Only one minute late.

“Good morning, Annie.” Jeffrey’s voice was as sweet as shoofly pie, too sweet.

She’d been dodging his flirtations for weeks. Though he was a nice enough co-worker, his attention left her confused. As did the smile he shot her way.

“Gudemariye,” she mumbled, pretending to check her pocket for pen and stethoscope.

“Careful––you know I love it when you talk plain to me.” Tall and redheaded, Jeffrey winked, then walked over to the copier machine. “Don’t tease her, Jeffrey.” Shelly issued her command in a don’t-mess-with-me voice. “Annie just arrived, and you know it takes her a few minutes to readjust to our ways.”

Peering over her reading glasses, Shelly waited for Jeffrey to return his attention to his work, which he did. She was their shift supervisor, and she was the perfect mother hen. Dark ebony skin, tall and somewhat on the heavy side—no one doubted she could handle whatever presented on their floor.

She waved Annie toward the little boy in room 307. “Go on, honey. Kiptyn has been asking for you since his five a.m. check.”

“Danki,” Annie replied, glancing up at the status board. “I mean, thank you. I had hoped to check on him first. He rested well last night?”

“As well as can be expected.” Shelly’s face took on the protective look Annie had come to love so well over the past six months. “Remember, Annie, care for your patients, but don’t let them break your heart.”

“Ya. I know. You have warned me before.” Annie smiled, felt in her pocket for the item that had arrived in the mail yesterday.

Christmas music played softly over the hospital sound system as she hurried down the hall toward Kiptyn’s room.

She entered quietly.

The boy didn’t seem to hear her over the buzzing and beeping of medical apparatus. An oxygen machine hummed beside his bed. A heart monitor beeped with the rhythm of his heart. And cartoon characters fought to save the world on the television set.

Kiptyn didn’t seem to notice any of it.

The eight-year-old boy sat staring at the wall. Annie could see, even from across the room, what an effort it was for him to breathe. She pulled in a deep breath, as if it would fill his lungs as well as her own, and cleared her throat, alerting him to her presence.

“Good morning, Mr. Kiptyn. It seems you are my first patient today. You must be very important indeed.”

“Annie.” The little boy’s voice reminded her of a song, one that could tear at your heart while still making you smile. His blue eyes brightened as he struggled to sit up straighter in his bed.

But even from the doorway she could tell that the sixteen hours since she’d last seen him had taken their toll. The circles around his eyes were a bit darker, his skin even paler, and— though it didn’t seem possible—she wondered if he might have dropped below the forty-four pounds she’d recorded yesterday.

“Let me help you, kind.”

Moving effi ciently to his side, she gently repositioned the pillows behind him with one hand and used the controls to adjust his bed with the other.

“What does kind mean? Is it an Amish word?”

“Ya. It means child. Sometimes I slip back into the plain language.”

“I like when you speak Amish.” Kiptyn rubbed his nose, knocking his oxygen plugs askew.

Annie reached forward and adjusted them, taking a moment to let her hand rest on the top of his shiny bald head. She’d seen the pictures his mamm had brought, so she knew the boy had once had curly blond hair. Kiptyn’s parents took turns staying with the child each night, then hurried off to their respective jobs early each day.

“Actually what my people speak is Dietsch.”

Kiptyn laughed even as he fought for a full breath. “Don’t you mean Dutch?”

“It’s a type of Dutch,” Annie agreed, slipping the blood pressure cuff over his small arm. “Actually Dietsch means Pennsylvania Dutch.”

“‘Will you teach me more Dietsch today?” Kiptyn asked. “Do you remember what I taught you yesterday?” Annie took his pressure manually and noted the numbers on her chart.

The monitor could have done it electronically, but she’d noticed that he had begun bruising where the machine tightened the cuff around his arm. After speaking with Shelly, she’d received permission to take his pressure manually during the day.

Annie also felt a person’s touch was more personal than a machine—anything to make his stay easier. It was her responsibility to care for these precious children.

“Gudemariye.” Kiptyn said the word as if he were practicing for a presentation in front of a classroom.

“And good morning to you,” Annie responded. She placed her stethoscope in her pocket, then tapped her chin, as if she were having trouble remembering any other words in her native tongue.

“I heard my parents talking last night. They thought I was asleep.” Kiptyn’s voice grew softer.

His hand crept out, and he traced the pattern of dark blue material on her sleeve, letting his fingers run down to her hand until it rested there on top of hers. “They’re thinking about having another baby. Something about how a brother could help save me. How’s that possible?”

“Perhaps you shouldn’t be eavesdropping, boppli.” Annie corrected him gently. She moved to check his IV drip.

“I’m not a baby, Annie.” Kiptyn smiled up at her again. “You taught me that word on Monday. What I’d really like is to have a brother—someone I could play ball with when I’m well. Do you have a word for brother?”

Kiptyn’s question caused a pressure to form around Annie’s heart, and she felt as if tears were being wrung from it—tears she couldn’t show this precious kind.

She sat gently on the side of the bed, taking the boy’s hand in her own. Earlier in the week, the doctors had told Kiptyn’s parents the chemotherapy wasn’t effectively battling his cancer. They wanted to move on to a new experimental drug treatment, felt it was his only hope of survival.

“Ya, we have a word for brother. I have a brother, did you know that?”

“How old is he?”

“Twenty-two. He is a grown man.” Annie hadn’t been able to visit her family in the fall, and now for the second time since waking she was nearly overcome with homesickness. Adam would be married next year. She looked out the hospital window at the snow that had begun falling and thought of Leah, the pretty, slim girl who would soon be her schweschder.

“So how do you say it, Annie?” Coughing wracked his thin frame, and she reached forward to rub his chest. “How do you say brother?”

“Bruder.”

“Well, that’s easy.” Kiptyn laughed again and pulled in a deep breath. “Bruder. Sounds like our word.”

“Ya, it does.” Annie stood and started out of the room, had nearly reached the door when her hand brushed up against what was in her pocket. She turned back around.

“Kiptyn, remember when I asked you if it was all right to tell my onkel about you?”

“Your Onkel Eli, who builds things. Yeah, I remember.” “Well I wrote him, and he sent you something.” She reached in her pocket, pulled out the wooden horse. It was handcrafted of maple wood and fi t in her palm. The detail was exquisite.

Walking back to Kiptyn’s bed, she placed it on his tummy.

The boy reached out, picked it up, and studied it.

“Cool beans!” A smile covered Kiptyn’s face, and for a moment he merely looked like a little boy instead of a cancer patient.

“Could I write him and say thanks?”

“He’d like that, I’ll—”

The door to Kiptyn’s room burst open, and Shelly stepped through.

“Annie, could I speak with you in the hall, please?” It wasn’t a question at all. The look on Shelly’s face was somber, more so than Annie had ever seen before.

“Of course, I was fi nishing up here. Kiptyn, I’ll check on you again a little later. Press your button if you need anything.”

She followed Shelly into the hall, confusion and worry sending beads of sweat down the back of her neck. She suddenly wished she’d pulled her long, brown hair back into a clip, anything to help with the wave of heat washing over her. Shelly turned as soon as Kiptyn’s door closed, then reached out and placed a hand gently on Annie’s shoulder.

“Annie, you have a phone call at the desk.” Concern mingled with sympathy. “Sweetie, it’s Vickie.”

“Mrs. Brown? My landlady? I don’t understand.”

“She’s calling about your father, Annie. There’s been an accident.”

Videos


What do you think about this review?

Comments

No comments posted.

Registered users may leave comments.
Log in or register now!

 

 

 

© 2003-2024 off-the-edge.net  all rights reserved Privacy Policy