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A Year Of Absence
Author: Jessica Redmond
Publisher: Elva Resa
Publisher
Reviewer: Bill McDonald – President of the MWSA
The story that has not been told -
Until Now!
When I went off to the Vietnam
War back in 1967, not many of us were career soldiers—most of us were
draftees, or just doing our enlistments. We all wanted to get the hell out
of the service as fast as we could. We were mostly single men. The vast
majority of us did not deploy as a unit but went as individual replacements.
For those of us who had spouses and children they would find a world with no
support systems in place. These families would become isolated in various
parts of the country. I honestly never gave any deep thoughts to what it was
like back in the states for those families left behind, or for those who
were married with children.
Author Jessica Redmond paints a
vivid picture of what was never talked about or seen by most of us old veterans
(or the public) in her riveting account of those left behind by their
spouses deployed to Iraq. Her book “A Year Of Absence – Six women’s stories
of courage, hope, and love” was an eye and heart opener for me. She gives us
an insider view of what life is like for those family members who have to
survive and carry on without their spouses for a year.
Her book is a well written
chronicle of the intimate lives of six women left behind on a US Army base
in Baumholder, Germany. Her women soon discover how little the government
can really do to help them and they soon realize that they have to take care
of each other. They face all the normal family issues plus the added
stresses of having their loved ones thousands of miles away in a combat
zone. Jessica captures the feelings and the emotions and the reality of the
life they faced. It is a hard honest look at what their lives were like for
one year. You cannot help but be captivated by their stories. I think, as
the title implies, these women’s stories were about love and courage and so
much more.
This book should be required
reading for all spouses of military personnel. Military life is not easy in
an all volunteer Army (or any of the services) and those marriages that do
manage to survive until retirement certainly have something special going
for them. This book is a look at how these women handled things and how they
felt. It spares us little—all of their emotions are opened up to view; the
fears, the depression and even the joy of reunions. It is not an easy life
and this book exposes that truth for all to see.
The book itself is very well
written and structured so that readers can follow along on this year long
journey as if you are a member of the family. One of the best written
accounts on the social impact of modern war; a must read book! Given the
MWSA HIGHEST RATING - FIVE STARS!
2005 Gold Medal Award for
Non-Fiction!

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