3.77 AVERAGE


This is the 2nd book in the series and I have not read the first. The main character is Ada and she has just found out in the last few months that she is adopted. She also found a way to better manage a disease she has had all her life as well. The book opens with her getting to go to her sisters wedding(she just found her sister in the first book). Once she returns she finds out she gets to go to Switzerland. She is also in love with a man who she can not have( or so she thinks). So off to Switzerland she goes. While there she gets to meet her birth mother.

This book is written in first person which is not a favorite of mine but its well written. I admit I found this story flat and boring at times. Maybe had I read the first book I would have felt differently but the characters from the first book are only in this one for a short time. A portion of this book deals with her feelings for a man named Will. She loves him but he seems to be courting someone else. The thing that got me was she never even really talked to the guy yet she was devastated about him seemingly courting another. The biggest portion of this book dealt with travel and history. The author goes into great detail about the train rides and the boat rides etc. In my option boring. Just seems there could have more depth added to the story in its place. The history lessons on Anti-Baptists was interesting. I grew up a modern Mennonite myself so I found it interesting to learn about history of the early movement of the church. The author did a great job of that.

Over all this book was just not for me. I admit I thought this was going to be more of a romance then it turned out to be. There is also some mystery involved but I found it pretty predictable. If you like books that deal with travel and history you might enjoy this book. I would suggest going back and reading the first book so you can get a better feel for the background leading into this book.

http://abbiesreadingcorner.com/2011/08/the-amish-nanny-by-mindy-starns-clark-leslie-gould/
hopeful mysterious reflective medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Complicated
Flaws of characters a main focus: No

This chaste Amish women's literature novel was a good read if you are open to a completely different vibe from the first novel in the series. The FMC is in a completely different place in her life and her voice is very different.

This is a romance in the loosest sense of the word. It isn't that a romance blooming but that a romance might be about to bloom.

Instead, coming of age themes such as finding God's will for your life are explored, along with a poignant story of childhood grief.

I think the first book in the series is necessary to set up the characters--their families and connections, but the way that Ms. Clark set up a completely different world for this second book was impressive! I enjoyed the history and geography immensely!

3.5 stars
I really enjoyed the first book in the series so was looking forward to this one (bk 2).
First off, I'm a little confused about the book title - The Amish Nanny. As far as I can tell, Ada wasn't really a nanny, as such. Yes, she helped look after and teach a young girl whilst travelling to Switzerland, but that hardly constitutes a Nanny.
Also, I wasn't as interested in the long storyline set in Switzerland. Parts of it I found interesting, about the Anabaptists, but I thought it was a bit too long & drawn out.
BUT - I did enjoy the first part of the book re Lexi's wedding. I also liked seeing the relationship developing between Ada & Daniel. I don't want to spoil things for those about to read the book, but there were things that I did like. I felt that Ada & Will's daughter got a lot closer whilst on the trip. It was nice finding out more about Giselle - Ada's birth mother. Hopefully book 3 will be more up my street. I own this series on my kindle.

Ada has a good life but she feels something is missing. When she has the opportunity to go to Switzerland to help settle a family matter she views this as an opportunity to learn more about herself. Ultimately this book is about forgiving oneself for one's guilt, whether justified or not. This book labels itself as a Christian romance and is called "The Amish Nanny" but both are only really nominal descriptions. This book is at its weakest at depicting romance. Yeah, it's a Christian romance about the Amish so I was not even expecting much kissing, let alone sex, but really the supposed romantic interests don't have any type of chemistry whatsoever. We are often told that some characters have romantic feelings for each other rather than any romantic feelings being demonstrated on the page. Plus, none of the male characters come alive except for one who lived over 100 years before the novel begins and is often referred to through letters by him and about him. Much better is the book's handling of themes of family, guilt, and becoming an adult. That's when the book comes alive, although some characters become less prominent as the book goes along and I found myself missing those characters even though they are not technically off the canvas. This book is a breezy read but could have been much stronger with more showing how relationships (not just the romantic ones )are developed and less telling how they are developed. Mildly recommended.

The story was fine. Nothing ground breaking. There was just so much filler. I found myself skipping over passages. There were a few unnecessary characters and descriptions of things that just did not move the plot along. I stuck it out until the end hoping for an unexpected reveal. Unfortunately the predictable things all happened. I'm not interested enough to finish this series right now.

Quick read and fun as the nanny comes to Switzerland to settle a land dispute. Fun to tour Emmental through the eyes of an Amish woman.

good book, wanted to get to the end to see what happened, but also found myself skimming to get thru it faster because there was a little more detail then I wanted to wade thru about the area they were in.

It wasn't as good as the first one, The Amish Midwife, but it was good. I liked that the author took the Plain people out of their comfort zone and into their historical past. It was fun to imagine them travelling through Europe. I can't wait to finish the trilogy.

GENRE: AMISH
PUBLISHER: HARVEST HOUSE
PUBLICATION DATE: JULY 1, 2011
RATING: 9 OUT OF 10

Ever since discovering that she was adopted, Ada Rupp has not been entirely content with life in her Amish community. While her long-term illness has stabilised itself, her mother still hovers over her, controlling her life out of fear that Ada may fall sick again. Still single and in her twenties, Ada hopes that she may have caught the attentions of Will Gundy, a close friend and widower with three children. But after rumours about Will and Leah Fisher begin to surface, Ada hangs all of her hopes on being appointed teacher of her community’s one-room schoolhouse. If she can’t have a family of her own, being a teacher would somewhat satisfy the longings of her heart. However, it appears that God has other plans for her, as soon after the teaching position is given to Leah, Will’s grandmother offers Ada the chance to visit her ancestral family home in Switzerland. An issue over the ownership of the land has arisen, resulting in the need for members of the two Amish families who own the land to travel to Europe in order to resolve matters. Will’s oldest daughter, Christy, will be travelling with them, giving Ada the chance to try out her teaching methods on the girl, who is still hurting from her mother’s death and refusing to learn anything at school. Will this chance to travel to Europe and act as a nanny to the daughter of the man she has come to love enable Ada to see God’s plan for her life? Or will it open her eyes to the adventures and temptations of the world, making it even more difficult to settle when she returns to her Amish community?

Having first been introduced to Mindy Starns Clark earlier this year when I read Secrets of Harmony Grove with my book group, I was pleased to see that she was choosing to focus on Amish fiction with her upcoming Women of Lancaster County series. I’d quite enjoyed reading Secrets of Harmony Grove, but had found it a bit dark in places and the mystery rather convoluted. As it turns out, this series is more to my liking. Mindy and Leslie – both established authors – team up together to write about the lives of women who are all somehow related to an Amish family in Pennsylvania. In the first book, The Amish Midwife, adopted Lexie travels to Pennsylvania after she discovers that this is where her biological family live. The Amish Nanny follows on from her story as her younger sister, Ada, comes to terms with the changes that have occurred in her life since meeting Lexie. While Lexie has found peace in her life after reconnecting with her Amish family, Ada no longer feels content in the life that she has always known. The Amish Nanny follows Ada’s journey to discover who she is and where God wants her to be in life.

Although they’re both very different characters, I loved Ada’s story just as much as Lexie’s. Mindy and Leslie have really stretched the Amish genre by including mysteries surrounding family trees and adoption, not to mention a wealth of information about how the Amish came to be in the United States. While the first book dipped into the history of the Anabaptists, I learned a lot more from Ada’s travels in Switzerland. Even I, a student of history who has read a lot about the religious upheavals in Europe during this period, still had a lot to learn about the Anabaptists and their persecution and subsequent emigration. This is definitely one to read if you feel that you’re getting bored with similar plots being repeated in Amish fiction, or would like something with a bit more depth. That said, you don’t have to be a historian to enjoy this book. Mindy and Leslie weave all of the information into the book in a way that makes it easy to understand and doesn’t detract from the story.

I would suggest that you might enjoy Ada’s story more if you’ve read the first book in the series, but a lot is summed up for those readers who choose to jump right in with The Amish Nanny. But fans of the series will be pleased to catch up with Lexie and her cousin Ella, who will be the protagonist of the third book. Ada also gets the chance to meet Giselle, her biological mother, who has been living in Switzerland for several years. While a lot of the book is spent focusing on the mystery of the ownership of Amielbach and locating the documents to prove this, Ada and Giselle have some healing to work through together. Ada really grows as a character throughout the book, and comes to define her identity not in terms of her family or her illness, but who she feels God is calling her to be. Although events in Pennsylvania have caused her to doubt her desire to be a teacher, wife and mother, her experiences in Switzerland help her to trust God’s will for her life. She’s helped by Christy, her charge on the trip, and Morgan, an English girl she meets on the journey to Switzerland. It was lovely to see Christy’s character also developing, as she slowly got over the fears that had emerged since her mother’s death. Morgan was a really fun character to read about as well, and I hope the authors may have plans for a cameo for her in future books.

The Amish genre is truly blessed to have Mindy and Leslie working to create new, unique fiction for its fans to enjoy. Their Women of Lancaster County series is likely to be enjoyed by all Amish readers thanks to its wonderful blend of mystery, family drama and romance. The Amish Nanny is a wonderful addition to the series and I hope that others will enjoy Ada Rupp’s story as much as I did.

Review title provided by Harvest House Publishers.