Kauffman Amish Bakery Books in Order
Part ofAmy Clipston Books in OrderThis page lists the Kauffman Amish Bakery books by Amy Clipston in order, with short summaries, related novellas, and help choosing where to start.
Last updated: June 30, 2026
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Publication Order
5 books
A Gift of Grace
by Amy Clipston
2009
Rebecca Kauffman's quiet Amish life is upended when she takes custody of her two English teenage nieces after a tragedy. Their arrival brings grief, culture clash, and strain to her marriage and faith.
A Place of Peace
by Amy Clipston
2010
In Bird-in-Hand, Naomi King faces old pain, family duty, and the possibility of love. It is a quieter Kauffman Amish Bakery novel, focused on healing and the search for peace after disappointment.
A Promise of Hope
by Amy Clipston
2010
An Amish widow with newborn twins learns her late husband kept painful secrets. As she tries to steady her small family, she has to decide whether security without love is really enough.
A Life of Joy
by Amy Clipston
2011
Lindsay Bedford has spent years between two worlds, and now she must choose one. A return visit to Virginia makes her question whether her future lies with the English life or the Amish community she has come to love.
A Season of Love
by Amy Clipston
2012
As weddings, baptisms, and return visits stir up the Kauffman community, several young lives are pushed toward big choices. Katie and Jessica both have to decide what love and belonging really mean.
Series background & context
At the center of the Kauffman Amish Bakery books is Rebecca Kauffman, her home in Bird-in-Hand, and the kind of family disruption that changes everyone's plans. The series begins when Rebecca and her husband take in her two English nieces after a tragedy, and that culture clash gives the early books their emotional engine.
Jessica and Lindsay Bedford do not arrive carrying simple grief. They bring questions about faith, identity, freedom, and what it means to belong in a community with very clear expectations. Rebecca is trying to be a steady Amish wife and aunt at the same time, and the strain lands on her marriage as much as on the girls.
That tension is what makes the series work.
These books are family sagas as much as romances. There are courtships and second chances, but the real through line is watching people learn how to live together after disappointment, misunderstanding, and loss. Clipston keeps the stakes close to home, with bakery work, quilting, church life, and everyday chores carrying just as much weight as the larger emotional turns.
As the series goes on, Lindsay becomes especially important, and the books shift toward the younger generation finding its footing. By the time you reach A Life of Joy and A Season of Love, the world feels fuller and more lived in, with old conflicts still echoing while new couples start making choices of their own.
If you like Amish fiction that begins with a strong family premise and then settles into questions of home, faith, and who gets to shape a young person's future, this is a very solid place to start. The Christmas novellas fit nicely around the main books, but the core appeal is the same all the way through, warm community life with real emotional friction underneath.
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