March 28, 2024

Author of historical fiction, Beatriz Williams in her New York Times review said The Women by Kristin Hannah “gathers women into the experience with moving conviction.” The experience is the Vietnam War –as it was experienced by military nurses both in Vietnam itself, but also when they return to the United States. This is a novel that needed to be written, and Hannah has done it well, indeed.
A Brief Summary
Frances “Frankie” McGrath is inspired when a friend of her older brother about to leave for duty in Vietnam says to her, “Women can be heroes.” In spite of the lack of support from her family Frankie enlists and becomes an army nurse-fresh out of nursing school and totally unprepared for what she will face in Vietnam. But she learns fast and overcomes her fears. She saves lives. She honors those whose lives she cannot save. She plays hard, loves deeply, and creates a new perspective on who she is and is capable of being.
Once her tour of duty ends and she is back home she faces not only the protests against the war, but the disbelief of others, including vets, who insist there were no women in Vietnam. She struggles with how to live her life without her identity as an Army nurse, often making bad choices. She is sustained, however, by the friendships of other women with whom she served.
What I Loved
Hannah is a master both of research and an ability to translate that research into clear and evocative scenes. A friend who has read the book says it is a “flashback to our era, music, and clothing.” As a woman who was in her 20’s during those years, I recognize the name of every song and remember the bellbottoms once in my closet. I graduated from college in 1970 and so remember going on marches to protest the war and, of course, the references to Kent State, and Walter Cronkite and other people and events of the times.
I was overwhelmed and amazed by the graphic scenes of events in the evacuation hospital where Frankie worked. How could Hannah not have been an Army nurse herself! And all those powerful scenes were balanced equally effectively by down time in the O Club and other brief interludes when the wounded were not incoming. We see and feel all this through the eyes of a woman, just as we saw and felt the experiences of the soldiers in Tim O’Brien’s classic, The Things They Carried–one of my most memorable books of all time.
What I Didn’t Love
Now first let me say that I don’t demand perfection. To love and recommend a book doesn’t mean I have to love everything about a book.
I have not read all of Hannah’s books (and she has written many), but when I read The Great Alone (2017) I seem to remember feeling there were a few scenes too many of things going wrong or the character making bad decisions. I don’t recall that feeling when I read The Nightingale (2015), which I loved, and I have not read The Four Winds (2021), which is the book prior to The Women.
I didn’t feel there were too many illustrations of the ugliness of war and the heroics that took place over and over again, but I did feel once Frankie returns home that her struggles, which are all valid, could have been treated more concisely and still delivered the same point.
Oh, and the men in her life and how she responds to them….well, you read it and let me know what you think. And the ending… well, again, let me know what you think.
Do I Recommend Reading This Book?
Yes. This novel is a well-written and vivid book of those Vietnam years. Even though I lived in those years, I confess I never thought about the powerful presence of nurses during the war, and for those who were not alive then, this book brings those years to life, a part of our history we must not forget. In recent years so many novels have been written about WWII, including The Nightingale, but Vietnam has been shoved into silence. The Women gives voice to those years, especially the women’s roles. Bravo.
An Invitation
What novels about a time in history have given you a new perspective or exposed you to something you did not know? I would love to know.
NOTE:
I just listened to episode 422 of the podcast What Should I Read Next? with Anne Bogel, and if you are someone who loves “quiet” books, I recommend listening to this episode. https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/what-should-i-read-next/id1073499086?i=1000650473926
Thanks for this comprehensive review! I will keep it handy when I’m reading it, but that could be awhile. I am # 190 in line at the library for it! 🙂 I will be looking forward to getting it eventually, and there are lots of other books to read in the meantime!
LikeLiked by 1 person
If you lived close by, I would lend it to you. Take heart–I just picked up Lessons of Chemistry that has been on my hold list for a VERY LONG time. Finally, it is my turn.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks for this! I plan to read it.
<
div>My mother was an army nurse just out of nursing school
LikeLiked by 1 person
Did your mother ever talk about those experiences?
LikeLike
not much. She had many bracelets the patients made for her in crafts classes. She was far away from the action of the war and dealt with the brokenness of the bodies, helping them to heal, even though they were prisoners.
LikeLiked by 1 person
This has been a much discussed book on a FB book group I belong to! I have other books I want to read before this one, but hope to get to it soon.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes, it is getting lots of attention. Worth reading.
LikeLike
I read The Women. It was just ok to me. Kristin Hannah is a great author but she missed her mark on this one. The story wasted too much time on Frankie’s love interests. There wasn’t a lot of coverage of how women and men were treated after the war and coverage of the protests was very weak.
LikeLike
So sorry this didn’t work for you. I wonder which Hannah book you liked the most.
LikeLike
I enjoyed The Nightingale and The Great Alone.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Good ones!
LikeLike
This was my first Hannah book. I thoroughly enjoyed it. My father was a Vietnam vet who didn’t talk much about his experiences (non-combat mechanic Quinyon). Having accompanied him as a Honor Flight Guardian two years ago, I can only imagine her emotions finding her brother’s name on the wall. As I read the book, I secretly hoped he would turn up at the wall as an MIA who returned to the states. Excellent read.
LikeLike
A friend who was a Navy nurse during Vietnam found this book to be so helpful and relevant. She was recently on a Honor Flight and other vets on the flight questioned her presence, if you can imagine!!!
LikeLike
recently read The Women, loved it. There were things that were not likely based on geography (Saigon to Pleiku to Saigon for a Navy chopper possibly but highly unlikely) the R&R timing. Lack of leave time. BUT the book shines despite the flaws and many things were just pitch perfect. The one thing she missed was the overwhelming boringness of it all
LikeLiked by 1 person
You sound as if you know from experience. Thank you for sharing–and for all you have contributed.
LikeLike