A Killing in Amish Country: Sex, Betrayal, and a Cold-Blooded Murder
304 pages
|Published: 5 Jul 2016
|Editions
|Details
This edition
ISBN: 9781250118707
Format: Mass market paperback
Language: English
Publisher: St. Martin's True Crime
Publication date: 4 April 2017
Description
AN OLD WAY OF LIFE
Thirty-year-old Barbara Weaver was content to live as the Amish have for centuries without modern conveniences but her husband, Eli, wanted a life beyond horses and buggies. Soon he gave in to the temptation of technology, and found ways to go online and meet women. When Barbara was found dead, shot in the chest at close range, all eyes were on Eli and his mistress, a Conservative Mennonite named Barb Raber.
A NEW KIND OF BETRAYAL AND DEATH. . .
Barb drove Eli to appointments in her car. She gave him everything he asked for: a laptop, rides to his favorite fishing and hunting spots and sex. Above all, she gave him the cell phone he would use to plan a murder. The Weaver case marked only the third time an Amish man was suspected of killing his wife in more than two hundred years in America. But the investigation raised almost as many questions as it answered: Was Barb Raber the one who fired the fatal shot? Or was Barbara Weaver dead before someone entered the house? What did Eli s friends, family, and church really know about him? And will life among the Plain People ever be the same?
"
Thirty-year-old Barbara Weaver was content to live as the Amish have for centuries without modern conveniences but her husband, Eli, wanted a life beyond horses and buggies. Soon he gave in to the temptation of technology, and found ways to go online and meet women. When Barbara was found dead, shot in the chest at close range, all eyes were on Eli and his mistress, a Conservative Mennonite named Barb Raber.
A NEW KIND OF BETRAYAL AND DEATH. . .
Barb drove Eli to appointments in her car. She gave him everything he asked for: a laptop, rides to his favorite fishing and hunting spots and sex. Above all, she gave him the cell phone he would use to plan a murder. The Weaver case marked only the third time an Amish man was suspected of killing his wife in more than two hundred years in America. But the investigation raised almost as many questions as it answered: Was Barb Raber the one who fired the fatal shot? Or was Barbara Weaver dead before someone entered the house? What did Eli s friends, family, and church really know about him? And will life among the Plain People ever be the same?
"