Saturday, February 9, 2019

Book Review: The Forgiving Jar by Wanda Brunstetter

The Forgiving Jar (The Prayer Jars #2)

About the Book:
Sara Murray had never met her mother’s parents and was surprised to learn after her death that they were Amish living in Pennsylvania. When she is finally able to make the trip to meet them, she is shocked to learn someone else has been living with them and pretending to be Sara. Sara can’t understand how quickly her grandparents are willing to forgive the imposter.
 
Secrets and deceit seem to follow Sara, and she is so tired of it. Though soon she meets Brad Fuller who is visiting her grandparents for during Christmas. She likes him a lot, but even he seems to pull away from her, not being totally honest.
 
Struggling, Sara finds an old canning jar hidden in the barn that is full of encouraging prayers. Can Sara find a way to forgive the past and move on to building new relationships?

This is Book 2 in the brand-new series, The Prayer Jars, from New York Times bestselling author Wanda E. Brunstetter.
Book 1 -- The Hope Jar (August 2018)
Book 3 -- The Healing Jar (August 2019)

About the Author: 
Wanda Brunstetter

Wanda Brunstetter is an award-winning romance novelist who has led millions of readers to lose their heart in the Amish life. She is the author of nearly 90 books with more than 10 million copies sold. Many of her books have landed on the top bestseller lists, including the New York TimesPublisher’s WeeklyUSA TodayCBAECPA, and CBD. Wanda is considered one of the founders of the Amish fiction genre, and her work has been covered by national publications, including Time MagazineUSA TodayNewsweekGood Housekeeping, and Country Woman. Wanda’s books have been translated into four foreign languages.

Wanda’s fascination with the Amish culture developed when she met her husband, Richard, who grew up in a Mennonite church, and whose family has a Pennsylvania Dutch heritage. Meeting her new Mennonite sister-in-laws caused Wanda to yearn for the simpler life. In their travels, she and her husband have become close friends with many Amish people across America. Wanda’s desire to explore their culture increased when she discovered that her great-great grandparents were part of the Anabaptist faith
MY THOUGHTS

I am really loving the Prayer Jar series. Each one that I read has been so unique with a intriguing story line. Each books can be read as a stand a lone, but there is some back ground information that is helpful if you read the first book. This book tugged at my heart strings. The characters are so well crafted and their stories so real. Two women. Who fell alone and feel hurt. They are shown forgiveness and grace from an older Amish couple. Ms. Brunstetter has done a great job weaving in biblical truth. God's grace and forgiveness is given so freely. This story is a great reminder of this. 


Many thanks to the author and Barbour Publishing for allowing me to read a copy of this book. All thoughts are my own. 


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