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In her widely acclaimed debut book Just Like Us, journalist Helen Thorpe tracked four Mexican women coming of age in America. In Soldier Girls, she writes about the twelve-year (2001-2013) journeys of three strikingly dissimilar women who served together in the Indiana National Guard and deployments in Afghanistan and Iraq. One senses that it is this differentness that helped bring together and form strong bonds through the intense stress of family separations, frontline experiences, and loss. Editor's recommendation. (P.S. Twenty percent of new military recruits are women and more than eleven percent of the forces sent to Iraq and Afghanistan are women.)
Overview
From an award-winning, “meticulously observant” (The New Yorker), and “masterful” (Booklist) writer comes a groundbreaking account of three women deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq, and how their military service affected their friendship, their personal lives, and their families.
America has been continuously at war since the fall of 2001. This has been a matter of bitter political debate, of course, but what is uncontestable is that a sizeable percentage of American soldiers ...