As the World Churns

· An Amish Bed and Breakfast Mystery with Recipes Book 16 · NYLA
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An Amish Bed and Breakfast Mystery with Recipes – PennDutch Mysteries #16
Even though she's now married to acclaimed Manhattan doctor, Gabriel Rosen, Magdalena—still a small-town Hernia girl at heart—is delighted to be chosen as the emcee for Hernia's first annual Holstein Competition. If there's anyone who doesn't pull punches in judging cows, it's Magdalena!
Plus, holding the Holstein Competition means that Magdalena's beloved bed and breakfast, the PennDutch Inn is packed with out-of-town guests, making it a real cash-cow of a weekend!
But when the contest's organizer, Doc Shafor, kicks the bucket—not in a natural way!—and both Gabe and his daughter mysteriously disappear, Magdalena's perfect weekend looks more sour than curdled milk!
With the help of her best friend—and the interference of her new mother-in-law—Magdalena vows to herd every clue till she nabs the daring killer, and the cows (and her family) come home!!!

About the author

Tamar Myers was born and raised in the Belgian Congo (now just the Congo). Her parents were missionaries to a tribe which, at that time, were known as headhunters and used human skulls for drinking cups. Hers was the first white family ever to peacefully coexist with the tribe, and Tamar grew up fluent in the local trade language. Because of her pale blue eyes, Tamar's nickname was Ugly Eyes.

Tamar grew up eating elephant, hippopotamus, and even monkey. She attended a boarding school that was two days away by truck, and sometimes it was necessary to wade through crocodile-infested waters to reach it. Other dangers she encountered as a child were cobras, deadly green mambas, and the voracious armies of driver ants that ate every animal (and human) that didn't get out of their way.

In 1960 the Congo, which had been a Belgian colony, became an independent nation. There followed a period of retribution (for heinous crimes committed against the Congolese by the Belgians) in which many Whites were killed. Tamar and her family fled the Congo, but returned a year later. By then a number of civil wars were raging, and the family's residence was often in the line of fire. In 1964, after living through three years of war, the family returned to the United States permanently.

Tamar was sixteen when her family settled in America, and she immediately underwent severe culture shock. She didn't know how to dial a telephone, cross a street at a stoplight, or use a vending machine. She lucked out, however, by meeting her husband, Jeffrey, on her first day at an American high school. They literally bumped heads while he was leaving, and she entering, the Civics classroom.

In college Tamar began to submit novels for publication, but it took twenty-three years for her to get published. Persistence paid off, however, because Tamar is the author of two mystery series. One is set in Pennsylvania and features Magdalena Yoder, an Amish-Mennonite sleuth who runs a bed and breakfast in the mythical town of Hernia. The other is set in the Carolinas and centers around the adventures of Abigail Timberlake, the proud owner of a Charlotte (and later Charleston) antique store, the Den of Antiquity.

Tamar and her husband moved to the Carolinas in 1993, and knew immediately that this is where they belong—this is home.

Tamar enjoys gardening (she is a Master Gardner), travel, painting and, of course, reading. She loves Thai and Indian food, and antiqueing. She and her husband have been to 59 countries, and have yet to decide which will be number 60.

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