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A review by mackenziewrites
The Women by Kristin Hannah
adventurous
dark
emotional
informative
reflective
sad
fast-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? No
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
5.0
The Women follows one young, naïve Army nurse into the throes of combat medicine during the Vietnam War. We watch her navigate her new surroundings with the help of fellow nurses and surgical mentors as she learns about life, love, and loss. She returns from war only to find out that home is neither what she remembers nor what she expected it to be and now has a new set of challenges to navigate as a female veteran.
I hadn’t read Kristin Hannah in over a decade when I read Firefly Lane by my parent’s pool one summer in college. I knew this book had serious undertones and I wasn’t sure what to expect but it blew me away, grabbing my attention from the very beginning. I used to work at an Army Hospital in Hawaii and am a Navy wife so I certainly felt something special for the characters and their experiences. I cried throughout the last 100 pages and a few times before that as well, so if you’re a crier, be prepared to have tissues nearby.
This book is EVERYWHERE right now so it was hard to avoid reading other people’s thoughts on it. One comment I saw after the fact was that the main character was unlikable. I thought on that for a bit, because at first, I could see where someone might think that and lose faith in her. But I think the author does an incredible job creating a character based on her background, privilege, and experiences and walking her through life realistically, not just catering to what the audience wants. I think that this makes the character more relatable. I know I made some of the same mistakes she made when I was in my twenties.
This was a riveting look into what it was like to be a woman and a veteran in the sixties and it left me wanting to talk to my parents and grandparents about their war experiences. Would recommend this book time and time again. Now I’m off to find more books set during the Vietnam War.
I hadn’t read Kristin Hannah in over a decade when I read Firefly Lane by my parent’s pool one summer in college. I knew this book had serious undertones and I wasn’t sure what to expect but it blew me away, grabbing my attention from the very beginning. I used to work at an Army Hospital in Hawaii and am a Navy wife so I certainly felt something special for the characters and their experiences. I cried throughout the last 100 pages and a few times before that as well, so if you’re a crier, be prepared to have tissues nearby.
This book is EVERYWHERE right now so it was hard to avoid reading other people’s thoughts on it. One comment I saw after the fact was that the main character was unlikable. I thought on that for a bit, because at first, I could see where someone might think that and lose faith in her. But I think the author does an incredible job creating a character based on her background, privilege, and experiences and walking her through life realistically, not just catering to what the audience wants. I think that this makes the character more relatable. I know I made some of the same mistakes she made when I was in my twenties.
This was a riveting look into what it was like to be a woman and a veteran in the sixties and it left me wanting to talk to my parents and grandparents about their war experiences. Would recommend this book time and time again. Now I’m off to find more books set during the Vietnam War.