Lancaster County Weddings Books in Order
Part ofRebecca Kertz Books in OrderSee the Lancaster County Weddings books in order by Rebecca Kertz, with short summaries, series background, and a clear place to start.
Last updated: July 4, 2026
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Publication Order
5 books
Noah's Sweetheart
by Rebecca Kertz
2013
After a broken engagement, teacher Rachel Hostetler comes to Happiness, Pennsylvania, hoping for a fresh start. Noah Lapp seems like the answer, until she learns he may be expected to court her cousin.
Jedidiah's Bride
by Rebecca Kertz
2014
Sarah Mast never expects to see the stranger who saved her twin brothers again. When Jedidiah Lapp returns and asks to court her, affection grows fast, but building a life together could mean leaving everything she knows behind.
A Wife for Jacob
by Rebecca Kertz
2015
Jacob Lapp has loved Annie Zook for years, but Annie wants a husband who feels older and steadier than he does. Working in her father's blacksmith shop gives Jacob one more chance to prove her wrong.
Elijah and the Widow
by Rebecca Kertz
2016
New widow Martha King is in no hurry to risk her heart again, especially with a younger man. But while Elijah Lapp works on her farm and saves for a carriage shop, their connection keeps deepening.
Loving Isaac
by Rebecca Kertz
2016
Isaac Lapp is trying to rebuild his reputation and his place in the Amish community. Childhood friend Ellen Mast believes in him, but Isaac must decide whether he wants the wider world, or the woman who feels like home.
Series background & context
Lancaster County Weddings begins in Happiness, Pennsylvania, and that small town matters almost as much as the couples do. The books follow Noah, Jedidiah, Jacob, Elijah, and Isaac Lapp as work, faith, and family expectations shape the way they court. Each novel can be read on its own, but together they build a fuller picture of a close Amish community where everybody notices who is helping whom, who is hurting, and who might be meant for each other.
It is a family series, but it never feels crowded.
The emotional pull comes from ordinary lives under pressure. Rachel Hostetler arrives looking for a fresh start after a broken engagement. Sarah Mast has to weigh love against the possibility of leaving her family behind. Annie Zook has been hurt before and does not trust easily. Martha King is a widow who is not eager to risk her heart again. Ellen Mast knows Isaac well enough to see both his best self and the restless part of him that keeps looking beyond home.
That is the basic rhythm of the series. Kertz likes misunderstandings that grow out of real fears, not giant twists. Her couples spend time working side by side, helping with chores, visiting after Sunday services, and slowly deciding whether trust can be rebuilt. A blacksmith shop, a farm, a buggy ride, a hoped for carriage business, these details are not just background. They are part of how the characters show patience, steadiness, and care.
The mood is gentle, but the problems are still real.
A lot of the tension comes from questions about readiness. Is someone mature enough for marriage? Can a person let go of an old disappointment? Is home a place, a family, or the person you choose? Even when the plot turns on courtship, the books are often really about belonging. That matters in a town like Happiness, where reputation sticks and small acts of kindness can change the direction of a whole relationship.
Reading Lancaster County Weddings in order gives you the best version of the series. Familiar families keep returning, side characters step into larger roles, and the town starts to feel lived in. If you like Amish romance with recurring neighbors, practical daily stakes, and a strong sense of place, this is a comfortable place to begin with Rebecca Kertz.
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