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Plain Secrets: An Outsider among the Amish
 
 
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Plain Secrets: An Outsider among the Amish [Paperback]

Joe Mackall (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (39 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 1, 2008
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.

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Editorial Reviews

From 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 © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* As this wonderful and enlightening book makes clear, the Amish are hardly a monolithic group. Actually, there are many different orders of Amish. The decidedly non-Amish Mackall has lived among the Swartzentruber Amish of Ashland County, Ohio, for more than 16 years. The Swartzentruber are considered the most conservative Amish, eschewing gas, electricity, and indoor plumbing. Even their ubiquitous buggies are driven without lights. Over the years, Mackall developed a friendship with the Shetler family, and Plain Secrets is an affectionate portrait of a family as well as a way of life. Some stereotype and romanticize the Amish, saying they represent an ideal, preindustrial American community. Others sensationalize them as backward religious fanatics. Mackall knows the Shetlers as persons, not cardboard figures, and he has readers get to know them as persons, too. His is hardly black-and-white portraiture. The Amish he writes about are as complex and flawed as any non-Amish. Although he admires their connection to the land and devotion to family, he is conflicted about the future of Amish girls, who live under a resolutely patriarchal household regime, in particular. This is a loving portrait, warts and all, of an often-misunderstood people. Sawyers, June --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 248 pages
  • Publisher: Beacon Press; Reprint edition (June 1, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0807010650
  • ISBN-13: 978-0807010655
  • Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 0.6 x 8.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (39 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #70,897 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

39 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (39 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

40 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautifully written, honest and insightful, July 30, 2007
With finely honed prose as honest and deep as the people portrayed here, the author opens a window into a world we couldn't otherwise experience. I loved learning about the most conservative Amish, but I took even greater pleasure in getting to know this one Amish family. The author is careful in avoiding sterotypes and generalizations. Instead, he paints a world for the reader, using language that allows us to sense and feel the wonder for ourselves. It's by far the best Amish book out there, and the best book of any kind I've read in a long time.
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32 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Personal and nicely written.....And informative, July 16, 2007
Am so glad the author has written this book, because I have had Amish friends, both old order and modern, since 1990 and have learned so much from them as well as how so many outsiders (English) do indeed either romanticize about the way they live or sadly mock and make fun of them. I have a number of books on plain living that involve Amish, Quaker, Mennonite ways.

And am glad to see this book from someone who is writing about a great friendship with one person and his family. And am so glad to see (unlike other books on the Amish) the author go out of his way to remind the reader that what he is writing about is his personal experience with one small group or member of one sect of the Amish.

It has also allowed me on my quest to live a more simple life to see that less can be more and that much of what modern society says is a must, actually makes for more work. Like carpeting which gets dirtier and is harder to clean than a wood floor that can be swept and damp mopped. Or wallpaper that gets stained over the years and goes out of date, and thus is not a real need.

If nothing else this wonderful book Plain Sects: An Outsider Among The Amish may well educate others about what really matters in life. As well as allow the reader to see that a work ethic that actually involves hard work can be good for the mind body and spirit. People can also learn how a community takes care of its own, and what true forgiveness is.

Something that I think even the author who admits to not fully understanding the rigid rules some Amish have, may miss, especially when it comes to church rules that are enforced even to the point of shunning or excommunication members (which is rare), is that even amongst traditional English religions like Catholicism, and the Baptists etc, excommunication for not following church rules used to be the norm. And for reasons that many outsiders never fully understood.

Its just that unlike the Amish and a few other conservative English sects, the denominations have become more cafeteria or pick and choose what you wish to follow when it comes to denominational rules.
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Plain Secrets" an Honest Contemplation of the Other, September 19, 2007
By 
In this window into the day to day life of members of a strict Amish sect, Joe Mackall delivers a clear and reflective portrait of a people living fully in accordance with their beliefs. As Mackall opens and warms to the family he comes to know as intimately as any "English" can expect to know the Amish, we also are drawn into their circle of faith. But he does not exclude us from his doubts about the limitations of such a life. He talks with young people who have fled their Amish upbringing and we feel, with them, the anguish of their choice. In leaving to enter the larger world, they find themselves shunned by family and community, bereft of any support as they try to find work and support themselves with only an eighth grade education and no proof they are even U.S. citizens. For those who stay, the life is a hard one, full of intense peace and also staggering losses. Their families are large, but children often die due to inadequate health care, and also as a result of accidents involving the horse-drawn buggies they drive on dangerous roads. These conflicts of faith and practice abound, and Mackall gives patient regard to every facet of the choices these Amish make as well as the choices he, himself, makes in living life as each believes he should. In addition, the writing is nearly transparent. I'd thought to read a few pages every night before bed, but found myself finishing the book in less than a week, grateful for Mackall's insight.
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buggy shop
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Swartzentruber Amish, Ashland County, Social Security, New Order, Pennsylvania Dutch, West Salem, Home Depot, Joe Keim, Uncle Bob, United States, Old German, Lancaster County, New Testament, State Route, Wayne County
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