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Amish Roots: A Treasury of History, Wisdom, and Lore (Center Books in Anabaptist Studies)
 
 
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Amish Roots: A Treasury of History, Wisdom, and Lore (Center Books in Anabaptist Studies) [Paperback]

John A. Hostetler (Editor)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 1, 1992 Center Books in Anabaptist Studies

It isn't the way of the Amish to write about themselves. But John A. Hostetler, author of the best- selling Amish Society, has put together a delightful anthology in which they do just that. More than 150 rare and unusual letters and journal entries, poems and stories, riddles, legends, and bits of family lore offer a uniquely authentic view of Amish life from colonial times to the present. Illustrated with 25 pages of full-color illustrations, this is the Amish story as told by the Amish themselves, by their friends and neighbors, and by others who understand Amish ways.

Hans Nussbaum, a nineteenth-century Swiss immigrant, writes to friends of a rough Atlantic crossing and a hard life in the Ohio Valley, suggesting that his "sleepy and lazy" cousins stay home in Europe. Virgil Detweiler tells of an ancestor's arrival at the port of colonial Philadelphia with personal baggage that included 5 copper stills, 30 stoves, 596 scythes, and 8 flutes. (He lost it all to King George's alert customs men.) In 1863 Amish bishop Daniel Beachy faces down a company of Confederate cavalry who try to steal his horse on a muddy Maryland highway. And an Amish teen- ager writes of life in a Pennsylvania prison after refusing military service during World War II.

But Amish Roots is more than an anthology of Amish history. Here Amish men and women speak out. On America. The decline of the family. Health and home remedies. Farming. They offer three centuries' wisdom on issues ranging from raising a barn to raising children, from getting along with neighbors to breaking in a team of mules. They tell what's wrong with public schools and share strategies for coping with government officials, aggressive reporters, and tourists. Converts to the faith tell their story. Those who leave the faith describe life among the "English."

Throughout, the Amish deal with the modern world in ways that often temper outright rejection with quiet compromise. In 1850, newly arrived Amish immigrants are astonished at the sight of the Mississippi sidewheeler that will take them from New Orleans to their new home in Illinois. More than a century later, an Amish tourist in Europe offers a first-hand account of crossing the English Channel by Hovercraft.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

""Less accessible than perhaps any other American subculture, the Amish reveal themselves only in fleeting glimpses to the 'English,' as they refer to outsiders. That is why former Temple professor John A. Hostetler's new collection is so valuable, for in it the Amish speak for themselves." -- Philadelphia Inquirer



"Amish Roots can be read straight through to help one develop a deeper understanding of the Amish people or it can be savored in bits and pieces, in someone's guest room or by one's bed. In a quiet way it is both a critique of contemporary American culture and a reassuring comment on the goodness of people." -- Natural History



"Describes seemingly every aspect of Amish life in the words of men and women who have lived it... Reproductions of such Amish artworks as drawings and hymnal and Bible bookplates, each one handsome enough to frame." -- Cleveland Plain Dealer

Book Description

Now in paperback -- the Amish story as told by the Amish themselves in letters, journals, poems, and legends


Product Details

  • Paperback: 360 pages
  • Publisher: The Johns Hopkins University Press (March 1, 1992)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0801844029
  • ISBN-13: 978-0801844027
  • Product Dimensions: 10 x 6.9 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,775,599 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An honest portayal of the life if the "Plain People", February 10, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Amish Roots: A Treasury of History, Wisdom, and Lore (Center Books in Anabaptist Studies) (Paperback)
Slow down and savour each page of this gem... "We are not Amish, we are Christians. Amish is just a nickname. We don't need to be ashamed that people call us that but we shouldn't build on the Amish name." William A. Yoder

This quote from the book sticks most in my mind after reading this collection of first-hand accounts of Amish life, gathered from personal and family documents by the Amish people themselves, dating from the 1700's to the present day.

This is their story, told their way. I found that most refreshing.

An honest portrayal of a community of people struggling to maintain the purity of their faith and love for their fellow man in a world that seems set to undermine everything they stand for. Rightly called a "Treasury", and presenting both the joys and the hardships of the Amish way of life, this book was hard to put down, and left me aching for a time when the world and the way we lived in it was much simpler fare.....

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4.0 out of 5 stars Information Abounds, May 28, 2009
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This review is from: Amish Roots: A Treasury of History, Wisdom, and Lore (Center Books in Anabaptist Studies) (Paperback)
A very informative book on the history and culture of the Amish people. Also an insight to their everyday life and customs.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Plain Talk From the Plain Folk, April 14, 2009
This review is from: Amish Roots: A Treasury of History, Wisdom, and Lore (Center Books in Anabaptist Studies) (Paperback)
I have occasionally felt that the Amish live as close to how true Christian should as any sect. Of course I have no way to gather evidence as there is only One Person to judge that and by the time I meet Him, neither I nor the Amish will care much about denominational differences. Yet I have something of an envy of the Amish with their tight neighborliness and old-fashioned ways. Though I doubt I would have the resolution to live like them.
This is a book of tales and anecdotes told by the Amish and those who know them. It gives a little about Amish history and culture, but it is mostly anecdotes.

These tales show bits of country life, day to day scenes and so on. The sort of thing I found touching was the pious devotion. It wasn't just admiration, it was a feeling of recognition. That was the sort of thing I have always seen in my Church. Of course I hardly claim my own sanctity(doing so would be wearisome to me and the reader and of course only one Judge of that matters making the exercise pointless). Rather I claim a sense of kinship. It doesn't awe me or frighten me as much as someone who is not used to it: I know Assemblies of God are human; I certainly know I am human. And I vaguely suspect Amish are human. And there you are.

Unfortunately I couldn't enjoy the book as much as I would like. People who do not scheme for power, pillage, or destroy can make dull tales. People who are prosperous, contented and never betray each other have a hard time being entertaining to us Englishers. The fact is that the Amish are to nice to have a life interesting from the outside. Their tales can be rather boring. In fact Plain Folk can be rather plain. The world could use a whole lot more of such plainness. But Englishers sometimes like a little fanciness in a story.

Be that as it may, better anecdotes could have been found. It's not that they were terribly bad, but that they were not memorable. Settings like this have made good fiction before, and it is hard to believe they never make good anecdotage. I would like to have had more about Amish traditions and such-like. And the book is sometimes rather preachy, and ironically, given the Amish reputation rather new-fangled style preachiness: to much about "materialism" and not enough about "worldly vanities". Be that as it may, the book is a reasonably good effort at paying a tribute to a people who have dedicated themselves to giving glory to God, who have built an attractive community, and have the glorious task of having no inclination whatsoever of being relevant to the modern world.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The Amish, who emigrated two and a half centuries ago from German-speaking countries in Europe, have survived in America in small, viable, and distinctive communities. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
mir ahn, hired boy
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Lancaster County, Old Order Amish, Mifflin County, Rule Number, Holmes County, Jacob Beiler, Berks County, John Reist, New Testament, The Budget, Word of God, Adams County, North Dakota, Supreme Court, David Beiler, Jesus Christ, United States, World War, Barbara Ebersol, Barbara Zook, Chester County, Henry Yoder, Jacob Stoltzfus, New York, Somerset County
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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