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Plain Secrets: An Outsider Among the Amish
Contributor(s): Mackall, Joe (Author)
ISBN: 0807010650     ISBN-13: 9780807010655
Publisher: Beacon Press
OUR PRICE:   $18.00  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: June 2008
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: Journalist Mackall writes about his surprising friendship with an Amish family trying to live a simple life in a complex world.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Religion | Christianity - Amish
- Social Science | Sociology Of Religion
- Biography & Autobiography | Religious
Dewey: 305.687
LCCN: 2007924329
Physical Information: 0.65" H x 5.88" W x 8.58" (0.70 lbs) 248 pages
Themes:
- Religious Orientation - Christian
- Geographic Orientation - Ohio
- Cultural Region - Midwest
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Joe Mackall has lived surrounded by the Swartzentruber Amish community of Ashland County, Ohio, for over sixteen years. They are the most traditional and insular of all the Amish sects: the Swartzentrubers live without gas, electricity, or indoor plumbing; without lights on their buggies or cushioned chairs in their homes; and without rumspringa, the recently popularized running-around time that some Amish sects allow their sixteen-year-olds.

Over the years, Mackall has developed a steady relationship with the Shetler family (Samuel and Mary, their nine children, and their extended family). Plain Secrets tells the Shetlers' story over these years, using their lives to paint a portrait of Swartzentruber Amish life and mores. During this time, Samuel's nephew Jonas finally rejects the strictures of the Amish way of life for good, after two failed attempts to leave, and his bright young daughter reaches the end of school for Amish children: the eighth grade. But Plain Secrets is also the story of the unusual friendship between Samuel and Joe. Samuel is quietly bemused--and, one suspects, secretly delighted--at Joe's ignorance of crops and planting, carpentry and cattle. He knows Joe is planning to write a book about the family, and yet he allows him a glimpse of the tensions inside this intensely private community.

These and other stories from the life of the family reveal the larger questions posed by the Amish way of life. If the continued existence of the Amish in the midst of modern society asks us to consider the appeal of traditional, highly restrictive, and gendered religious communities, it also asks how we romanticize or condemn these communities--and why. Mackall's attempt to parse these questions--to write as honestly as possible about what he has seen of Amish life--tests his relationship with Samuel and reveals the limits of a friendship between English and Amish.