Tag Archive | Pan Books

The Women by Kristen Hannah

Women Can Be Heroes Too

The Women by Kristen Hannah is one of those books whose impact will last forever. It is a book that will not fail to change you as your heart breaks for the women. It will affect your emotions as you feel disappointment, hurt and anger for the way the women are treated; as well as admiration for their bravery.

The Women follows a young woman who went to war as a newly qualified nurse, in Vietnam. She bonds with the only two other female nurses. It is a trio who will support each other for a lifetime as only they understand the horrors they lived through. The war in Vietnam was mainly a man’s war.

The Vietnam War started as war on communism but became more unpopular as the years rolled on. Many young American men and Vietnamese civilians lost their lives, and the American government did not always report the truth. “He told her repeatedly that the war was coming to an end. Walter Cronkite said the same… But it was still going on. And men were dying.” For the first time, people had the war beamed straight into their living rooms via the medium of television. The Vietnam War was a war that provoked many anti-war demonstrations.

The book is powerful. We watch Frankie evolve from a society teen to a brave young nurse. “Frankie had been taught to believe that her job was to be a good housewife, to raise well-mannered children and keep a lovely home.” Her view of life will be forever changed. “What’s it like?… Vietnam?”… “Words won’t help… I could talk all day about what it’s like and you still won’t be ready.” Frankie goes from innocence to experience after being totally unprepared for the horrors of war.

The role of nurses was important. Not only did they assist the doctors, they could perform life-saving treatments themselves. Sometimes their role was to hold the hand of the dying. The men who returned, never forgot the nurses who helped them. “There are men going home to their families because of us.”

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The Last Song Of Winter by Lulu Taylor

So Beautiful

The Last Song Of Winter by Lulu Taylor is a most beautiful dual timeline novel that consumed me from the start.

The stories are set in the 1940’s and in present day. Both time periods are linked to a couple of families. The war consumes characters in the 1940’s. In present day there is a search for the truth. A resistance member ‘disappeared’ and her family and descendants really need to know what happened to her so that they can put the past to bed.

The novel is one of discovery as characters learn just who they are. A teen in the 1930’s is ‘helped’ to blossom as she is taken under the wing of a Parisienne lady. Her time at finishing school opens her eyes to new possibilities under the guidance of the older, more sophisticated female.

A lonely island off the Pembrokeshire coast holds its own secrets. The wild, untamed landscape appeals to some characters but not others. It contrasts sharply with the gay sophistication of Paris before the war.

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An Ocean Apart by Sarah Lee

A Brave New World

An Ocean Apart by Sarah Lee is a marvellous historical novel that I just could not put down.

The novel is set in 1954 as we follow three young women from the Caribbean to England to train as nurses in the fairly new NHS. We witness the bravery needed to cross the ocean.

Nursing is a profession requiring high standards. We follow the new recruits through exams and ward rotations. Everyone has different gifts – some are good with children or in maternity or on the psych ward. Whichever their area of expertise, we witness the dedication, hard work and care needed.

Britain at the time was emerging into a new world. The Windrush generation were here. They were greeted with warmth and love on the whole but there were pockets of ugly racism and ignorance. The girls all have varying personalities and support each other. The reader witnesses, with horror, the lengths some will go to with their prejudice.

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