Dana thinks country means quilts from cozy boutiques, and Faith can't imagine a town without hot pretzel vendors...
But they find themselves home with Shelley in Iowa for the last weeks of summer, and small-town life is anything but humdrum! One of Shelley's brothers, Jeff, falls hard for Dana, and she wonders if she's always going to attract country types. Everyone is getting ready for the County Fair when Faith is suddenly, shockingly ill. The best doctors in Pine Bluff can't figure out what's wrong. Dana and Shelley stand helplessly by, worried that for Faith, small-town care simply isn't going to be enough.
"Emily Chase" was the pen-name used by a number of authors who contributed to Scholastic's Girls of Canby Hall series, about a group of girls living at a New England boarding school. Amongst these contributors was romance novelist Julie Garwood.
Faith and Dana have been invited to visit Shelly for two weeks on her farm. It becomes evident that the story is going to involve cultural prejudice, with Faith and Dana representing girls from big cities, and Shelley representing a girl from a 'country' area. The town Shelley is from is very small and the activities center around farming. Dana has a hard time dealing with Shelley's mother accepting domesticity rather than pursing a more active professional female role.
Dana says the town is like a 'foreign country.' Neither Dana nor Faith can understand why 4H is so important to the people there. Things also go very bad a Dana is nearly killed during a horse ride and all of them are nearly killed by a tornado.
One of the boys who lives there says he sees no sense in school. When Faith becomes ill she is taken to the hospital and her mother wants her moved to an Eastern hospital where she thinks the hospital care would be better. It turns out the quality of the care was the same. Faith and Dana end up realizing how snobbish they had been acting.