❤️ loved this book because...
Kristin Hannah’s new book is a powerful look at the contributions of thousands of women in the Vietnam war. Frances “Frankie” McGrath is a nurse and in 1968 applies for active duty as an ER nurse in Vietnam. But nothing can prepare for the horror she will encounter while taking care of the dead and dying soldiers, who are mostly kids.
After two tours, she returns to a world that refuses to recognize her contributions to the war effort. She constantly is confronted by “There were no women in Vietnam.” Even her parents refuse to accept that she did her duty for her country. Set in the hostile anti-war protests of the late 1960’s and early 1970’s, Frankie struggles to come to terms with her place in society.
As with all Hannah’s books, the writing is phenomenal and gut wrenching. This is a story that needed to be told and the author created a moving, worthy tribute to the women who gave so much to an unappreciated and uncaring country.
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25 authors picked The Women as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
The missing. The forgotten. The brave… The women.
From master storyteller Kristin Hannah, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Nightingale and The Four Winds, comes the story of a turbulent, transformative era in America: the 1960s. The Women is that rarest of novels—at once an intimate portrait of a woman coming of age in a dangerous time and an epic tale of a nation divided by war and broken by politics, of a generation both fueled by dreams and lost on the battlefield.
“Women can be heroes, too.”
When twenty-year-old nursing student Frances “Frankie” McGrath hears these unexpected…