
Part of Series
Can Love survive when a big city doctor is invited to her Amish boyfriend's family wedding? April Monroe is convinced she’ll never find her perfect match—besides, with her crazy schedule as a family practice doctor at busy Lenox Hospital in New York City, she doubts she’d have time for him even if he does exist. Life is full after eight years of college and medical school, and she loves her job and her patients. For now, that has to be enough—until one day she meets an intriguing man at a coffee shop, and her life turns upside down. Jesse Hardin has worked for years to finally make partner in a veterinarian clinic, and he’s getting close to his dream. He loved animals almost as much as people when growing up in his quiet Amish community, but the Amish lifestyle wouldn’t allow him to follow his dream of becoming a vet. He made the hardest choice of his life, leaving at eighteen before he joined the church, so he could pursue that dream. He assumed he’d never find a woman who could understand his past and fit into his future, so saving animals became his life. Until he meets April. Then the unexpected happens—his younger brother wants him as his best man at his Amish wedding, and Jesse knows he has to go. He just has to convince April to come with him…after he gets the courage to tell her about his background. April sets aside her shock and accompanies Jesse back to Pennsylvania, but the surprises keep coming. Jesse’s mother is less than welcoming, and his old flame has decided she wants him back. Can Jesse withstand the pull of family and his old love and stay true to April, or will the tension tear them apart?
Author

Miralee Ferrell and her husband, Allen, live on eleven acres in the beautiful Columbia River Gorge in southern Washington State, where they love to garden, play with their dogs, take walks, and visit their grown children. She is also able to combine two other passions—horseback riding and spending time with her married daughter—since she lives nearby—and they often ride together on the wooded trails near their home. Ironically, Miralee, now the author of over twenty books, with many more on the way, never had a burning desire to write—at least more than her own memoirs for her children. So she was shocked when God called her to start writing after she turned fifty. To Miralee, writing is a ministry that she hopes will impact hearts, and she anticipates how God will use each of her books to bless and change lives.