A View from the Buggy
โ Scribed by Eicher, Jerry S.;Miller, Nathan O
- Publisher
- Harvest House Publishers, Inc.
- Year
- 2014
- Tongue
- English
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Most of us want a simpler life, and there's no better example of the simple life than found among the Amish. But what is it really like to be Amish?
In this delightful compilation of stories by more than 30 Amish men and women, you'll get the inside story on the daily life of Amish families. With humor, grace, and charm, these "plain" people tell their stories; bringing tears, laughter, and an occasional dose of Amish wisdom to your heart. You'll learn...
This unforgettable book is compiled by two men who know the Amish. Author Jerry S. Eicher was raised as an Amish boy and Nathan Miller is a member of the Old Order Amish.
โฆ Subjects
Christian life--Amish authors;RELIGION--Christianity--Denominations;Simplicity--Religious aspects--Christianity;;Biography;Electronic books;Christian life -- Amish authors;Simplicity -- Religious aspects -- Christianity;RELIGION -- Christianity -- Denominations
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
In this masterful collection of short stories, a celebrated Cuban writer continues his imaginative exploration of the genesis of the modern Caribbean world.
This book is based on a capstone course that the author taught to upper division undergraduate students with the goal to explain and visualize the connections between different areas of mathematics and the way different subject matters flow from one another. In teaching his readers a variety of prob
Michael Shea offers a light-hearted behind the scenes account of his years with presidents, monarchs, captains of industry, film stars, secret agents and their hangers-on. The great and the good, the powerful and the feared end up, to misquote Enoch Powell, lonely, bitter and alone at home. This boo
"We're mysterious aliens in the crowd. We jump like fleas from future to past and back again, and float like clouds of gas between nebulae; in a flash, we can reach the edge of the universe, or tunnel into a quark, or swim within a star-core. . . . We're as unassuming as fireflies, yet our numbers g