Books

Janette Oke Wrote Her First Novel at 42. Then She Wrote 70 More.

The When Calls the Heart author launched the modern Christian romance genre, seeking to tell stories of faith in hardship.

A photo of Janette Oke.
Christianity Today March 3, 2026
Image courtesy of Shelley Bacote.

Janette Oke, author of the popular Christian romance book Love Comes Softly, remembers first hearing Lucy Maud Montgomery’s Anne of Green Gables read aloud while sitting at her wooden desk in a one-room schoolhouse in Alberta, Canada.

Each day after her class’s noon break, her teacher would read to the class a chapter from the book. As she listened, the characters seemed to jump off the page. She recalled identifying with the needy yet loveable Anne as she got into various scrapes and navigated the perils of the transition to adolescence.

Over the course of Oke’s decadeslong career—which spans 75 books and a dozen movie and TV adaptations—she has worked to craft similarly relatable characters. 

“As you write, you must be very conscious of the fact that whoever you create … becomes alive for the reader,” Oke said. “The character must become a person … so you don’t just tell about her, you invite her into the reader’s life.” 

Oke, who recently turned 91, told CT that after the publication of her latest book last year, she’s done writing novels. During her five decades as an author, she wrote stories of faith through hardship, often set in the Canadian frontier, that have inspired readers for generations and launched an industry of evangelical romance books. 

Oke was born in Alberta in 1935 to a farming family. At the time, the Canadian frontier was no distant memory: Canada had only established Alberta as a province 30 years before her birth, and Oke remembers her neighbors living on farms built on land they settled themselves. She noted that the pioneer days were “the base on which our lives were built.”

From the time she was a child, Oke (born Janette Steeves) was interested in writing. When Oke was about 8 years old, her mother fell ill and had to be hospitalized. Oke wrote a poem expressing how much she missed her. While she remembers the poem being “rather silly,” her mother loved it and would later ask her to recite it when friends or neighbors came to visit. 

“It was rather embarrassing for a child,” she said. “On the other hand, it was inspiring because I saw that something I had written had touched the heart of someone else.” 

Oke’s mother, who was a Christian, felt it was important to take her children to a small local church. At age 10, Oke attended a summer Bible camp at the encouragement of her pastor and remembers feeling like she needed to respond during an altar call. She and her sister both stepped forward. 

“That was when I really understood that one had to actually apply your belief to your heart,” Oke wrote. “From then on, I attempted to live according to God’s word and his plan.”

As a teenager, Oke wrote poetry for fun, but after graduating from high school, she decided to attend Mountain View Bible College in Didsbury, Alberta. There, she met her future husband, Edward Oke, through her sister, who helped Edward’s mother with housekeeping to earn some extra money. She remembers a time when he came to help her while she was dusting and sweeping the school’s small chapel. 

“I was surprised,” she said, her smile evident even over the phone.

The pair married after graduation and moved to Indiana, where Edward studied at Bethel College while serving as a youth pastor for a nearby congregation. Soon after their arrival, Oke suffered a miscarriage. Two years later, she gave birth to a baby boy, who then died minutes later. 

“People did not want to keep talking about my baby because they felt it was painful for me and a reminder,” Oke said. “And yet, I felt that was exactly what I needed to do. I felt very empty.” 

The Okes had four more children, three sons and a daughter. In 1960, the family moved back to Canada, where Edward became the pastor of a church in Montgomery. Three years later, he became president of Mountain View Bible College. 

The busyness of motherhood and supporting her husband’s ministry left Oke with little time for writing novels until she was 42. By then, her four children had reached their teenage years, and she felt a prompting from the Lord to finally write the story that had been simmering in the back of her mind for years.

“I had the thought, What would happen to a woman in the days of the pioneers if she were heading west and something happened to her spouse? What options did they have? There were few—if any—suitable jobs available for women, and she wouldn’t have had the money to turn around and go home,” she said. 

Amid all the ruminating, “I felt like I knew the characters well,” Oke said. “I mentally allowed them to visit me. I don’t know how else to say it.”

Oke started writing the book in longhand, stealing bits of time throughout the day. During one family vacation, she wrote during the car ride to their destination, balancing “partially used scribblers from the kids’ school years” on her knee. She finished the first draft of Loves Comes Softly in just two or three weeks.

The story centers around 19-year-old Marty Claridge, who heads out west with her husband, Clem, deeply in love and ready for adventure. But when Clem dies on the journey, Marty receives an offer of marriage from a widower whose young daughter is in need of a mother. The book considers whether love and faith in God are enough to carry a person through life’s greatest difficulties.

The book became a family project. Oke’s four children helped type up a later draft, and Edward visited the library to research information on the publishing industry. During a visit from her sister, the pair worked together at the dining room table, Oke editing one copy as her sister read through the original. While trying to focus on the task at hand, Oke couldn’t help but sneak glances at her sister’s face. 

“That was, I think, a little message from God to me, because I could see in her face different emotions as she was reading through the script. And I could tell it was connecting,” she said.
“God gives us a lot of little boosts if we are being obedient.”

Yet when she pitched her book to publishers, Oke couldn’t find any interest in a Christian romance novel. At the time, Christian publishers were focused on self-help and Bible studies. While Oke sees the value in these types of books, she knew fiction would reach an audience nonfiction could not.

When her manuscript reached the desk of Carol Johnson, then the editorial director of Bethany House, she realized it was something special, Oke said. The other women in the office agreed. Yet Bethany House had never published a novel in its 20-year history.

“The gals kind of had to fight for it,” Oke recalled.

Bethany House decided to publish Love Comes Softly in 1979. It went on to sell more than 1.8 million copies, making it her all-time most popular title. The book and its sequels helped make Bethany House one of the most dominant forces in Christian fiction publishing. 

Love Comes Softly not only launched Janette’s celebrated and remarkable publishing career; it marked the beginning of Bethany House Publishers’ inspirational fiction line and is widely regarded as giving rise to the Christian fiction genre in our market,” said Rochelle Gloege, senior acquisitions editor at Baker Publishing Group, which purchased Bethany House in 2003.

Oke went on to write seven more books in the Love Comes Softly series, following its main characters into old age. Beginning in 2003, the books were adapted into several made-for-TV movies.

In 1983, Oke published When Calls the Heart, a novel about a young woman who takes up a teaching position on the Canadian frontier and finds herself falling in love with a Mountie. To date, the book has sold over 1.2 million copies. The resulting six-book series was adapted into a Hallmark show in 2014 and has recently been renewed for a 14th season. In total, Oke’s books have sold over 30 million copies. 

Despite her novels addressing all kinds of adversity, Oke’s work is at times labeled “feel good” storytelling. Commenting on the When Calls the Heart television series and other similar programs, The Washington Post referred to them as stories where “the main characters do the right thing. The problems get worked out. The guy and girl … always end up together.” This criticism comes from Christians as well, who decry a need for authors to write more about real issues. 

But Oke says it’s been her life’s mission to communicate her faith through her writing, to inspire her readers to believe that if you surrender your life to Jesus, he will be there even in the deepest, darkest valley. Oke hasn’t just written that reality—she’s lived it.

Before coming up with the idea for her most recent novel, Oke thought she was done with writing. But while reading through Revelation and the Gospels more than three years ago, she felt that familiar tug at her heart once more. Oke noticed in the passages the correlation between Christ’s first and second coming and the need for his followers to be ready.

“I heard this voice say, ‘I want you to write that,’” she recalled.

What flowed forth was The Pharisee’s Wife, which follows the story of Mary, a young woman who catches the eye of a Pharisee and gets swept away into the world of the religious elite during the time of Jesus’ ministry on earth. 

Oke said that while writing the book, she felt God’s guidance in a way she hadn’t previously. With other novels, she planned meticulously before beginning to write. But this time, she had less knowledge of what direction the book would take. Yet each next step came to her mind as she wrote. 

At one point, she said, she felt God prompt her to write about a certain character dying for his faith.  

“And I thought, Oh no, Lord! I loved him. I didn’t want anything like that to happen to him. He was my favorite character. But I knew I had to follow that.” 

She added, “Now, I’m not saying that I got it all right, but I felt that I stayed as true to God’s direction as I could.”

Oke hopes The Pharisee’s Wife, which was released in March 2025, will serve as a reminder for readers to be prepared for Jesus’ return. As she draws closer to the end of her life (“I am over the big 9-0 already,”) she hopes that the legacy she leaves isn’t simply her written words but  also how she lived. 

“It’s so important when we go about our day that if we claim to be a follower of Jesus, we talk like it,” she said. “We don’t get angry and upset about little things. We don’t pick at people. We try to show light and present him in a favorable way.” 

In her gentle Canadian voice, she issued a simple challenge: “Can you present to people an image of the Jesus they need to know?”

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