Plain Secrets: An Outsider among the Amish by Joe Mackall

BUY IT NEW

  • $13.00 Online price
  • $11.70 Member price
  • Join Now
  • skip to cart
  • Add to Wish List

Usually ships within 24 hours

FIND IT IN OUR STORES

Enter a zip code

(Paperback - Reprint)

Write a Review

  • Publisher: Beacon Press
  • Pub. Date: June 2008
  • ISBN-13: 9780807010655
  • Sales Rank: 155,087
  • 248pp
  • Edition Description: Reprint
 
  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Features
  • Full Product Details

Synopsis

A journalist writes about his surprising friendship with an Amish family trying to live a simple life in a complex world

Plain Secrets tells the story of Joe Mackall's Swartzentruber Amish neighbors, the Shetlers, using their lives to paint a nuanced portrait of this most traditional Amish sect.

"Mackall does the job beautifully, painting an intimate portrait of the family that leaves the reader feeling humbled by the common thread that's woven into all of us."
—Sarah English, Cleveland Magazine

Publishers Weekly

In an engaging personal memoir, Mackall, an Ohio-based writer and professor of English, describes the close-knit relationship he has cultivated over more than a decade with a neighboring Amish family. This is neither an exposé nor an outsider's fanciful romanticization of the Amish. By focusing on the loves and losses of one large Amish clan, Mackall breathes life into a complex group often idealized or caricatured. He refers, for example, not to "the Amish" writ large, but instead to "the Swartzentruber Amish I know," describing in some detail the tremendous differences between the Swartzentrubers, by far the most traditional sect, and the Old Order, New Order, Beachy and other Amish groups. The Swartzentrubers not only eschew electricity but also padded or upholstered chairs, souped-up buggies, indoor plumbing, the tradition of rumspringa (a running-around period for some Amish teens) and—perhaps most important for this narrative—contact with "the English." Mackall's is the first book to venture behind-the-scenes of this most conservative Amish group. At times Mackall is critical of the Swartzentruber way of life (such as when an eight-year-old girl dies in a buggy accident because the sect rejects safety measures for buggies), but it is a deeply respectful account that never veers toward sensationalism. (June)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

More Reviews and Recommendations

Biography

Joe Mackall is the author of The Last Street Before Cleveland. A professor of English and journalism at Ashland University, he is coeditor of the journal River Teeth and has written for NPR's Morning Edition, the Washington Post, and the Cleveland Plain Dealer, among other publications. Mackall lives in West Salem, Ohio.

Customer Reviews

Average Rating: Customer Rating for this product is  out of 5


Be the first to write a review!