We were there.
That is the last sentence you would read in the The Women by Kristin Hannah. She is one of those authors I follow on Goodreads. This is a story of a war veteran nurse who served in Vietnam for two years during the Vietnam war back in the seventies.
A fellow blogger and an online friend wrote about her own review of the book. I was in the middle of reading it when she posted it.
I was already in college (1973 ) when I learned of the Vietnam War with the US but according to my research, it started in 1959 up to 1975. And like the rest of world happenings, you just didn’t concern yourself with it as long as you are not directly affected. It was on the news alright but it was just that, a part of the news reel that you see on television. It was a conflict in Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia from 1 November 1955 to the fall of Saigon on April 30,1975.
Hannah’s book was based on the real happenings in Vietnam. According to her, it took her a year to write it based on real life stories of people who have been there. I can just imagine the atrocities done to the US war veterans who went home either in coffins, lost of limbs, suffering from the effects of war, struggling with tragedies, PTSD and the like. Vietnamese civilians and especially children were victims too.
The Women gave me a glimpse of how life was back then. When these women came home, they were looked down with disdain and some people even said that there were no American women involved in the Vietnam War. Most of them were nurses. They found it hard to start a normal life again after coming home.
It took the US government a decade to dedicate a memorial to all those war veterans. The Vietnam Veterans Memorial is located on the National Mall in Washington, DC. The memorial consists of three parts: the Vietnamese Vetersns Memorial Wall, the Three Servicemen Statue and Flagpole and the Vietnam Women’s Memorial.
I know I listed the books I want to read from my TBR list on a previous blog post but when I saw the nice and not so good reviews of the book on the Historical Fiction page on Facebook, I just have to get hold of it. It took me almost a week to read it in between painting my new project. Next on my list is Still Life by Sarah Winman, a new author for me.
Hello friend, I enjoyed reading your post. I subscribed. See you often. Have a happy and bright day🌙💫🔆🦋
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Thank you so much. How would I call you? Thank you too for following my posts.🥰
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just call me A please 😊 ☘️🍀🌟
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🥰🥰🥰
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A good review
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Yeay, thanks a lot Derrick.🥰
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I can’t imagine a bad review of this book. Glad you and I both loved it. Will be on the lookout for Still Life since it looks promising.
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Believe me, there were so many readers who didn’t like the story although most readers think it is a good one.🥰
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I wonder why. Too hard to take in?
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Perhaps, I guess they really find it hard to read a book in that setting.🥰
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That book also had a good review on Elizabeth’s blog. Glad you enjoyed it too.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Yes, I read about that too Pete. I was in the middle of reading it when I saw her review.🥰
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A high school friend of mine was a U.S. Army Sergeant during the war and was killed. His name is on the Vietnam War Memorial Wall in Washington, D.C. I almost married a Vietnam veteran, but like many men who fought there, he came home with drug problems and a violent temper. The war left many men with PTSD. I never knew any women who served as nurses there, but I was aware that the U.S. had women there as nurses. Like many Americans my age, the Vietnam War was a defining part of our youth.
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Oh my, that was sad Deb. Sorry to hear about your friend. Yes, most of them had PTSD finding it hard to move back to their previous lives. War does not do anything good to people.🥰
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Out of all the Americans I knew who fought in Vietnam, I’ve only known one or two who came back in good mental health.
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That was a sad part of world history, a senseless war and many died of it.🥰
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