Money is the root of small-town chaos for a Quaker pastor in the second Hope novel from “a splendid storyteller,” the author of the Harmony series (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette).
Sam Gardner has been pastor of Hope Friends Meeting for just four months when ninety-eight-year-old member Olive Charles passes away. What’s more shocking news is that Olive has left her entire estate—worth nearly one million dollars—to the meeting. At first the gift sounds to Sam like a like a godsend. Yet as word of the unexpected windfall spreads, it stirs up a storm of conflicting opinions amongst the church members as to how the money would best be used. And before the estate is even released to the meeting, Olive’s estranged niece, Regina Charles, turns up tipsy and furious in Hope and threatens a lawsuit over what she believes is rightfully hers. Although it may be an opportune time to ask for a raise, Sam finds himself questioning his future in Hope while trying to guide his lively congregation and find a peaceful way to deal with Regina.
Praise for Philip Gulley and the Harmony series
“Gulley is a Quaker pastor from Indiana with a charming sense of small-town life—and a shrewd sense of life in general.” —The Wall Street Journal
“Gulley’s work is comparable to Gail Godwin’s fiction, Garrison Keillor’s storytelling, and Christopher Guest’s filmmaking . . . in a league with Jan Karon’s Mitford series.” —Publishers Weekly
“The biggest collection of crusty, lovable characters since James Herriot settled in Yorkshire.” —Booklist