The Courtship of Nellie Fisher Books in Order
Part ofBeverly Lewis Books in OrderRead The Courtship of Nellie Fisher series by Beverly Lewis in order, with quick summaries, series background, and a clear starting point for Nellie's journey.
Last updated: January 12, 2026
As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases (at no extra cost to you).
Publication Order
3 books
The Longing
by Beverly Lewis
2008
After](https://www.amazon.com/dp/0764203126%22,%22description%22:%22After) everything that has happened, Nellie is left with a longing for peace, love, and belonging. In a community that remembers, she has to rebuild trust, face the past, and decide what kind of future she can truly live with.
The Forbidden
by Beverly Lewis
2008
Nellie’s](https://www.amazon.com/dp/0764203118%22,%22description%22:%22Nellie’s) feelings pull her toward a path her community will not easily accept. As rules and relationships collide, she has to decide whether fear will run her life, or whether honesty and faith can carry her through the cost.
The Parting
by Beverly Lewis
2007
Nellie](https://www.amazon.com/dp/076420310X%22,%22description%22:%22Nellie) Fisher is forced to face a painful separation that changes her plans and her heart. As she tries to hold on to faith through disappointment, she learns that some partings are endings, and some are beginnings.
Series background & context
The Courtship of Nellie Fisher is a trilogy that stays close to one woman's heart as she tries to make a future in a community where the rules are clear and the consequences are not theoretical. Nellie Fisher is Amish, she is thoughtful, and she wants to do right by her family and by her faith. But wanting to do right is not the same as knowing what you should choose, especially when other people are making choices for you.
The series, told across The Parting, The Forbidden, and The Longing, uses courtship as more than a romance plot. Courtship is where hopes get attached to plans, and where a private decision can become a public issue. The books explore how easily love can be tangled up with fear, obligation, and pride, and how quickly a reputation can shift in a tight-knit settlement.
Sometimes the hardest thing is admitting what you really want.
In The Parting, Nellie faces a separation, from a person, from a plan, or from a version of herself that no longer fits. The story leans into the ache of change, the way a goodbye can be both necessary and painful. It also shows the daily rhythms around her, work, family meals, worship, and conversations that sound polite on the surface but carry a lot underneath.
In The Forbidden, the tension sharpens as feelings and rules clash. Nellie finds herself pulled toward something that does not fit neatly inside what her community expects, and that pull forces hard questions about conscience and courage. The series does not treat that clash like a simple thrill. It shows the slow pressure that builds when you care about someone you are not supposed to care about in that way.
By the time you reach The Longing, Nellie is carrying more than a crush. She is carrying the weight of what has already happened, plus the question of whether she can rebuild trust. In a small Amish community, people remember, and they have opinions. Nellie has to decide what repentance and forgiveness look like when both sides are still hurt, and when the future still feels uncertain.
This trilogy is character-driven and emotionally steady, with the familiar Beverly Lewis mix of daily life, family ties, church expectations, and quiet turning points. Read in order for the smoothest arc, since each book grows directly out of the last. If you like Amish romance that takes faith, consequences, and second chances seriously, Nellie Fisher is a good place to start.
Edited by
Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.
Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.





















Comments
Did we miss something? Have feedback?
Help us improve this page by sharing your thoughts