Separate From the World
β Scribed by Gaus, P. L.
- Book ID
- 108501063
- Publisher
- Plume
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 363 KB
- Series
- Amish-Country Mystery 6
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781101513262
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
As another college year draws to an end, Professor Michael Branden is weary after nearly thirty years of teaching. Sitting in his office on a warm spring day, he receives an unexpected visit from an Amish man who claims his brother, a dwarf like himself, has been murdered. Their discussion of the odd details of the case is interrupted by a commotion on campus, which turns out to be the apparent suicide of a young woman, who, it seems, has leapt to her death from the college bell tower.
The investigations of these two deaths become intertwined as Professor Branden again teams up with his colleagues Pastor Cal Troyer and Sheriff Bruce Robertson to seek explanations for these bizarre events.
Separate from the World is a story of a rift between two Amish factions, one that favors the use of medicine and that participates in a college study of genetic traits particular to the Amish community, and the other that rejects any outside influence.
Once more, P. L. Gaus takes us inside a separate culture and, in a manner both gentle and grim, highlights the complex relationship of the Amish and the βEnglishβ as they live inside or outside each otherβs orbits.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Enos Erb, an Amish man, claims that his brother, Benny,--a dwarf like himself--has been murdered. Upon investigation, links to a controversial genetics study examining the effects of inbreeding within the Amish community are uncovered--a study in which both Enos and Benny had participated.
Enos Erb, an Amish man, claims that his brother, Benny,βa dwarf like himselfβhas been murdered. Upon investigation, links to a controversial genetics study examining the effects of inbreeding within the Amish community are uncoveredβa study in which both Enos and Benny had participated.
Objective: Body image measures were assessed among the Old Order Amish, a Protestant religious community living separate from Western industrialized society. Method: One hundred six Old Order Amish men (n = 50) and women (n = 56), aged 14-67 years, were studied by two measures of body image: (1) bod