The Bridesmaid Beverly Lewis Paperback, 320 pp., $14.99 Bethany House (September 11, 2012)
New from NY Times Bestselling Author Beverly Lewis! Twenty-four-year-old Joanna Kurtz is so far proving the adage “always the bridesmaid, never the bride.” Yet despite appearances, she has a beau who is secretly courting her from afar. Will her hidden passion for writing and his responsibilities to his family keep them forever apart? “No one does Amish-based inspirationals better than Lewis.”—Booklist
The Bridesmaid Beverly Lewis Paperback, 316 pp., $14.99 Bethany House Publishers (September 11, 2012)
Twenty-four-year-old Joanna Kurtz is so far proving the adage “always the bridesmaid, never the bride.” Yet despite appearances, she has a beau who is secretly courting her from afar. Will her hidden passion for writing and his responsibilities to his family keep them forever apart?
The Fiddler Beverly Lewis Paperback, 352 pp., $15.99 Bethany House Publishers (April 10, 2012)
In this riveting series debut, Beverly Lewis takes you to the beloved fictional Amish town of Hickory Hollow, Pennsylvania—where restless hearts find peace and Old World charm soothes the soul. When Amelia Devries, thoroughly modern and equally disillusioned, takes a wrong turn during a rainstorm, she unexpectedly meets an Amishman—and a community—that might just change her life forever.
The Mercy Beverly Lewis Paperback, 320 pp., $14.99 Bethany House (September 6, 2011)
Don’t miss The Mercy, the stunning conclusion to the New York Times bestselling series The Rose Trilogy from Beverly Lewis! With the young men they love bound to the English world, will two Amish sisters be forced to choose between their beloved People and true love?
The Judgment Beverly Lewis Paperback, 336 pp., $14.99 Bethany House (April 5, 2011)
Rose Kauffman is engaged to Silas Good, a well-liked Amish fellow, so why does she still pine for Nick Franco, especially now that he has left the Amish community under a cloud of suspicion? Meanwhile, Rose’s older sister, Hen, has returned to live at her parents’ farm with her young daughter. Hen and her modern husband, Brandon, are separated by mutual agreement, although he is threatening to sue for custody of their daughter if Hen does not return soon. Is there any way Hen can reestablish her place among the People without sacrificing her marriage?