Description: With their thirteen children grown, Anna and Felty Helmuth are ready for their next adventure. That means trying their hands at matchmaking--because what could be more fun than igniting love when it's right and undoing mismatches when they're wrong? Now Huckleberry Hill just might turn out to be the most romantic spot in Wisconsin . . . Lia Shetler is resigned to being a spinster. She's too tall and sturdy to ever be marriageable--so says her overbearing dat. Instead, she's helping her pretty, spoiled sister Rachel secure the perfect husband--the Helmuths' grandson, Moses Zimmerman. But the more Lia sees of his gently teasing ways and quiet understanding, the more she wishes that Moses could be hers alone. Moses knew that his grandparents couldn't resist trying to find him a wife. But he never expected that it would be the graceful, sensible Lia--a woman who is tall enough to look him in the eye and honest enough to make him question a promise holding him to his past. Now Moses and Lia will need the kind of miracles that only faith and courage can bring to finally reach for a lifetime of happiness.
Brief description: Jennifer Beckstrand is the USA Today bestselling author of the Matchmakers of Huckleberry Hill series, the Honeybee Sisters series, the Petersheim Brothers series, the Amish Quiltmaker series, and a number of other novels and novellas. Novels in her Matchmakers of Huckleberry Hill series have been RITA(R) Award and RT Book Reviews Reviewer's Choice Award finalists. Huckleberry Hill won the 2014 LIME Award for inspirational fiction and Huckleberry Hearts was named a Booklist Top 10 Inspirational Fiction Book of the Year. Jennifer has always been drawn to the strong faith and the enduring family ties of the plain people. She and her husband have been married for nearly four decades, and she has four daughters, two sons, and seven adorable grandchildren, whom she spoils rotten.
Review Quotes:
"Beckstrand has written a sweet romance with a lot of heart that offers a new, refreshing take on the overused matchmaking trope."
-- "RT Book Reviews (41/2 stars)"