Valerie Weaver-Zercher Archives - 黑料正能量 News /now/news/tag/valerie-weaver-zercher/ News from the 黑料正能量 community. Thu, 05 Dec 2013 19:04:42 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Amish 鈥渂onnet rippers鈥 examined in alumna鈥檚 book, published by Johns Hopkins University Press /now/news/2013/amish-bonnet-rippers-examined-in-alumnas-book-published-by-johns-hopkins-university-press/ /now/news/2013/amish-bonnet-rippers-examined-in-alumnas-book-published-by-johns-hopkins-university-press/#comments Mon, 14 Oct 2013 21:09:55 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=18396 Amish 鈥渂onnet rippers鈥 have become massively popular in the past decade, Valerie Weaver-Zercher told an audience of fellow-alumni and faculty during at 黑料正能量, Oct. 11-13.

A new Amish romance is published about every four days, with at least 86 released in 2012, said Weaver-Zercher at a Saturday morning talk sponsored by 黑料正能量’s .

She herself had never read an 鈥淎mish romance鈥 until Johns Hopkins University Press approached Weaver-Zercher, suggesting she investigate this burgeoning market. That led to Weaver-Zercher鈥檚 first published book, .

No explicit sexual description

Even within the Anabaptist world, the books are widely read, despite their questionable authenticity. Weaver-Zercher, a 鈥94 grad who majored in , mostly focused on why people are reading this genre, rather than delving deeply into the books’ accuracy or literary quality.

She interviewed several Amish romance authors and numerous readers 鈥 mostly non-Amish, evangelical women 鈥 who cited two basic appeals of the books: evocation of 鈥渁 slow and simple life,鈥 and 鈥渁 clean read鈥 (i.e., no sexual explicitness).

Her audience laughed when Weaver-Zercher elaborated that a love scene within the genre 鈥渕ight be some romantic glances over a pot pie.鈥

Although the Amish comprise only one-tenth of 1 percent of the U.S. population, the genre is well-covered in the mainstream media, including a recent , who is also managing editor at and a contributing editor for .

At her presentation, several alumni, whose student years dated from the 1950s to the 2000s, named as a favorite the recently reprinted , a Mennonite author who penned a semi-fictional account of his mother, first published in 1940.

One million book sales, plus TV dramatization

Weaver-Zercher noted the first commercially successful contemporary Anabaptist-themed romance, Beverly Lewis鈥 1997 , published by Bethany House and dramatized on television, has sold over a million copies. Its heroine endures ostracism after finding she was adopted.

Lewis, who based the character on her Mennonite grandmother, ranks with Wanda Brunstetter and Cindy Woodsmall among the genre鈥檚 top three authors, who together have sold more than 24 million books. Yet only one current Amish romance author, Linda Byler, is Amish or Old Order Mennonite (the two branches of Anabaptists share more similarities than differences) 鈥 which Weaver-Zercher notes engenders skepticism about the field鈥檚 authenticity.

The genre鈥檚 female protagonists tend to be virgins or young wives; the men, earnest and sensitive, Weaver-Zercher notes. At least four authors are men, and Weaver-Zercher found an elderly, Oklahoma Mennonite farmer who has read 90 Amish romances.

In her , Weaver-Zercher said some authors blend 鈥渁 divine love story鈥 with the earthly one. She cited a sentence in Brunstetter’s The Hope Chest in which a young woman, being kissed, finds herself 鈥渞eveling in God’s glory.鈥

Gentle mysteries tucked in

鈥淪ome authors add gentle mysteries along with the romance narrative,鈥 said Weaver-Zercher. Byler鈥檚 series, Lancaster Burning, portrays a community plagued by arson.

Weaver-Zercher finds 鈥渄istinctive styles鈥 among some authors, unlike the formulaic products of some mainstream romance publishing houses. However, they follow parameters common to 鈥淐hristian fiction鈥 鈥 although a 鈥渇alse hero鈥 sometimes appears, endings are always happy.

鈥淭he 鈥榯hrill of the chaste鈥 may be rooted in the broader idea of moral innocence 鈥 a rejection of the mass culture,鈥 said Weaver-Zercher.

She suggested the novels exemplify a 鈥減urity culture鈥 in reaction to what Pamela Paul鈥檚 book Pornified terms today鈥檚 mass culture. They may also, Weaver-Zercher suggested, be seen as 鈥渁 Christian version of “The Way We Never Were,鈥 referring to the title of an analysis of the American family by Stephanie Coontz.

Pointing to what French theorist Gilles Lipovetsky has labeled 鈥渉ypermodernity鈥 鈥 a rushed, materialistic, technology-dominated culture 鈥 Weaver-Zercher added with a smile that the books give readers 鈥渁 temporary vacation from hypermodernity, even when they read them on Kindles or Nooks.鈥

Ironically, however, she noted Amish romances are 鈥渟ituated smack-dab in hypermodern publishing models.鈥 She pointed to Christian publishers getting bought up by big houses (including HarperCollins, now owned by Rupert Murdoch), and the large stock of the romances in such stores as WalMart.

Part of commercialization of Amish phenomena?

Given those dynamics, she says, 鈥淚t is likely that not everyone is amused.鈥

Weaver-Zercher鈥檚 audience mentioned other commercial Amish-related phenomena, ranging from the 鈥淎mish Mafia鈥 reality show, to 鈥淎mish vampire鈥 novels, to bestseller Danielle Steel鈥檚 new venture into the setting.

Audience member Shirley Hershey Showalter, a 1970 黑料正能量 graduate, suggested Amish romances appeal to 鈥渘ostalgia for the rural life in general.鈥 Showalter, former president of Goshen College, recently published .

At Herald Press, Weaver-Zercher edited a soon-to-be-released book which she terms 鈥渉istorical-romance fiction.鈥 Jacob鈥檚 Choice by Ervin R. Stutzman, former dean of and current executive director of , deals with the life of Amish farmer Jacob Hochstetler, whose family was massacred during the French and Indian War. She says Stutzman, who was raised Amish but is now a modern-living Mennonite, did meticulous research and 鈥渟tays very true to details, but adds fictional elements to make the narrative read like a novel.鈥

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Books Show the Way How to Live Simply, with Pleasure /now/news/2011/books-show-the-way-how-to-live-simply-with-pleasure/ Thu, 23 Jun 2011 20:19:46 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=13492

Eating locally and in season wasn鈥檛 a fad during Mary Beth Lind鈥檚 childhood in rural West Virginia. It was just the way things worked. Her mother grew a large garden, and her father, a doctor, sometimes accepted vegetables as payment from his patients.

鈥淵ou just learned to live with what you have,鈥 says Lind, who graduated from 黑料正能量 in 1972 with a degree in home economics.

Lind, now a registered dietitian, later earned a graduate degree in nutrition from Oregon State University and returned briefly to 黑料正能量 to teach home economics in 1980.

In 2005, Lind drew on her professional expertise and personal experience to write Simply In Season (Herald Press), a cookbook arranged by season with an emphasis on fresh and local foods. Lind co-wrote the book with a Goshen College graduate, Cathleen Hockman-Wert.

鈥淭hat whole sense of eating locally and seasonally [that I grew up with] was what was so important about Simply In Season,鈥 said Lind. She hopes the book will help broaden the horizons of recent generations of home cooks who don鈥檛 鈥渒now where their food comes from other than the supermarket, [and] who want to support the local,聽seasonal聽food economy but聽to whom it is not part of their heritage.鈥

A decade before Simply In Season鈥檚 publication, Lind and her sister, Sarah Myers (class of 鈥67) co-wrote Recipes from the Old Mill: Baking With Whole Grains (Good Books, 1995), inspired by childhood memories of their uncle, who ran a water-powered grain mill in West Virginia.

Herald Press celebrated the 30th anniversary of a kindred bestseller, Living More with Less, with last year鈥檚 release of a new edition edited and expanded by Valerie Weaver-Zercher 鈥94. Living More with Less was originally written by Doris Janzen Longacre, who died of cancer just before completing her manuscript (her husband, with three others, ushered it into publication). Longacre had previously written the bestselling More-with-Less Cookbook (Herald Press, 1976 & 2000) 鈥 860,000 copies sold by 2010, including British and German editions 鈥 which provided inspiration for Lind and Hockman-Wert鈥檚 Simply in Season.

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