Wagler, who now works at a building and supply company in Lancaster County, Pa., deserves praise for his honesty. The memoir is worthwhile as much for its Amish insights as for its exploration of one man's emotional turmoil, regret, and shame. It was a "paradox that would haunt me for almost ten years: the tug-of-war between two worlds." His tale of restlessness looks acutely at the clash of family ties with love of freedom. Such unspoken displeasure sparked a cycle of coming and going for the author, who repeatedly crept away from his community only to return, if reluctantly, for its familiarity. Yet Wagler bravely goes on to expose pervasive dissatisfaction among both youth and adult Amish living in what he characterizes as a stifling, formulaic world. Once he turns sixteen and enters his Rumspringa years, hes rebelling against an Amish world that trapped. The simplicity of everyday life may seem quaint on the surface. Waglers memoir is a classic coming-of-age story. Jerry's mother was nineteen years old and nine months married when he was born. Eicher (nearly half a million books sold) turns his pen to a moving memoir of his life growing up Amish. Wagler recounts his Amish upbringing, from dating conventions and worship services to local gossip and schoolyard bullies. Eicher Book Summary: Bestselling fiction author Jerry S. This memoir offers a nuanced account from a man who straddled both Amish and "English" (non-Amish) worlds. Filmmakers, academics, and novelists have offered depictions of Amish life.
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