Bio: Beverly Lewis, born in the heart of Pennsylvania Dutch country, has more than 17 million books in print. Her stories have been published in 12 languages and have regularly appeared on numerous bestseller lists, including the New York Times and USA Today. Beverly and her husband, David, live in Colorado, where they enjoy hiking, biking, making music, and spending time with their family.
In 1997, she introduced the world to her
first adult Amish fiction series, The
Heritage of Lancaster County, which included The Shunning, The
Confession, and The Reckoning. The series catapulted to the top of
the charts. Lewis, a Lancaster County native, was quickly touted as an expert
source in Amish tradition, and that first series launched a new fiction genre.
Now, 26 years later, Lewis’s novels have been reenacted on film and in live
theater, and The Confession Musical has been adapted for the big
screen and for UPtv. In Lewis’s newest narrative, The Heirloom, she comes full circle and offers a
prequel that leads up to the eve of The Shunning. Lewis’s legion of fans
will be thrilled to journey back to Lancaster County, particularly Hickory Hollow,
for a heartwarming tale that explores themes of belonging, love, and life’s difficult
transitions.
About the story: When her widowed father remarries,
nineteen-year-old Clara Bender is at a loss about what comes next for her. She
is no longer needed to run the household. So when she comes across letters from
her Mamma’s aunt Ella Mae Zook, she is eager to visit Hickory Hollow’s Wise Woman.
Meanwhile, Ella Mae is dealing with her own
losses. With the passing of her husband, her grown children are ready to make
sure she is resettled. But Ella Mae is in no hurry to leave the farmhouse that
she and her husband shared for over five decades. She is also grappling with
her role in the community as a widow. Once viewed as a caring and spiritually
insightful counselor, Ella Mae feels she no longer has the capacity to offer
much wisdom anymore.
As the summer days
grow longer, Ella Mae and Clara find individual healing and purpose as they
share their lives and their love for quilting. When Clara’s life is upended by an
unexpected incident and a potential beau, Clara must decide where her heart
truly belongs—back in her small Indiana hometown or in Hickory Hollow.
Please provide a brief summary of your newest novel, The Heirloom. This generational story
features two unique Amish women—one, a courting-age girl from Indiana, and the
other, an aging widow living in Hickory Hollow, Pennsylvania. When Ella Mae
Zook hosts her heartbroken grandniece for a visit, the two women blend their
quilting expertise to restore an heirloom wedding quilt and, in the process, reveal
hidden wounds and long-held secrets.
The Heirloom is the
long-awaited prequel to The Shunning. Why did you choose to come full
circle with your new novel? For
more than a decade, I’ve been very curious about Ella Mae’s courting-age years,
including the tragedy that set her on course to becoming known as the Wise
Woman. My stories must simmer in my heart, sometimes for years. So I asked
myself what sort of young woman was she in her teens? How did her faith and
Plain upbringing inform her choices? And . . . was this part of
her life story ready to be told? Additionally, my readers have been pleading for
more about this captivating and spirited Amish woman so beloved. As I do, I entrusted
all that I know of Ella Mae to God and believed now was the right time for The
Heirloom.
Your fans love Ella Mae Zook, Hickory Hollow’s Wise Woman, and she
has made appearances in a number of your novels. What life-altering event has
recently occurred in her life? She loved her husband dearly and now grieves deeply
her loss, experiencing the anxiety and uncertainty of widowhood, while attempting
to create new daily patterns.
Ella Mae is in a period of transition and is even questioning her
purpose in the community. How does she come to terms with the new “normal” in
her life? By taking one small,
courageous step at a time, and with the unexpected help of a providential summer
visit from her grandniece Clara.
Nineteen-year-old Clara Bender has experienced her own set of losses.
What motivates her to seek out the wisdom and companionship of Ella Mae? Clara has discovered many personal letters to her Mamma
from Aunt Ella Mae in Hickory Hollow. This unearthing stirs up a desire to meet
the woman whose written words have touched Clara’s broken heart in a dramatic way.
How do Clara and Ella Mae find healing in each other’s presence? At
day’s end, the two women work to restore the heirloom wedding quilt in Ella
Mae’s front room, a quilt that holds a tender love story all its own. As they stitch
and repair, the two become aware of a growing bond, and slowly, gently, their warm
connection begins to restore each wounded heart.
While in Hickory Hollow, a budding romance forms between Clara and a young man. But this new relationship comes with its own set of problems. Can you provide a hint of what these problems are? Aaron’s father and the bishop are concerned that Clara’s Indiana Amish church district is far less traditional than Hickory Hollow’s. Theirs emphasizes following rules, while Clara’s upbringing underscores a personal relationship with Christ. And Clara’s father is convinced she could fall back from her faith were she to marry and reside there. Pressure from both sides presents a quandary to Clara and her hope to become Aaron’s bride.
This book is a great fit for anyone who has experienced grief or a
time of transition. What other themes are found in The Heirloom? Trusting God when obstacles loom large, the
importance of connecting with like-minded believers on life’s journey, and looking
to God for His will in a life mate.
How has The Heirloom impacted your own life? I’ve
been planning this novel for years, and when I was given a 1911 heirloom quilt that
belonged to my grandmother Ada (whose true-life story inspired The Shunning),
I began to relive Katie Lapp’s fictitious story . . . as well as
my dear parents’ passings seven-and-a-half years apart. I made countless notes
and outlined the various fictional story lines that came to me, all the while
juggling other writing deadlines. But Ella Mae kept interrupting me! Meanwhile,
my readers were also clamoring for more about their favorite character. So as I
contemplated Ella Mae’s startling back story, along with young Clara’s heartbreaking
one, I began to “feel” the two characters’ yearnings and struggles pulling them
onto the pages of this novel . . . at long last.
The Heirloom will be
enjoyed by Amish fiction fans. Could you share why your novel will also appeal
to quilters? For quilters who have
attempted the challenging task of restoring an heirloom quilt, this book will surely
inspire, and perhaps even encourage a similar project. For quilters who love to
create a new quilt “from scratch,” The Heirloom will offer “aha”
moments, as well as a real sense of familiarity, authenticity, and a measure of
joy.
What do you hope readers will gain from reading The Heirloom? For one thing, I hope they will be encouraged in
their faith, my constant hope. Also, that they will finally discover Bishop
John Beiler’s motivation for imposing the harsh treatment on Katie Lapp in The
Shunning. Of course, there will be my trademark underpinning of
peace—because of Jesus—in the midst of the story’s conflicts, twists, and turns.
How can readers connect with you? I write a monthly newsletter available via a free
subscription at https://www.beverlylewis.com/engage/newsletter.
I am also active on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/officialbeverlylewis/.
Thank you, Beverly, for sharing The Heirloom with
my blog readers and me. I have loved reading your books, and now I’m featuring
this one while it’s only been 3 months since my husband for almost 59 years
went to his heavenly home.
Readers, here’s a
link to the book.
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THE HEIRLOOM by Beverly Lewis sounds good. PA.I am looking forward to reading this book. I love Beverly's books.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a great story! Cherie J. from Florida.
ReplyDeleteBrenda from Mississippi. I loved The Shunning!
ReplyDeleteSuch a wonderful author. Would love to read. Blessings from WV.
ReplyDeleteWould Love to read this book by Beverly Lewis Love her Books SARAH T. From OHIO
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