I'm ambivalent about this book. It was recommended to me as the best resource for secular repats. (So much of the material for repats assumes we've been overseas doing mission work!) The first few chapters are really reassuring; they describe the issues and feelings of repatriation very accurately, which was just so comforting, because it's really easy to feel like you're an irrational freak. Some good bits I highlighted:
"What happens, then, when you come home? Wherever you turn, you are confronted by behaviors and circumstances that now seem as different to you as many of those you encountered when you first arrived abroad. From the perspective of your new norms, home is now strange, and you react in much the same way as you did when you got to Brazil or Taiwan; you find much of your environment confusing, frustrating, disgusting, and just plain wrong."
"In the meantime, nothing comes naturally. The most mundane of tasks once again require your conscious attention... you are continually on edge, not able to trust your instincts and just be yourself."
"By contrast, the people back home often seem narrow and provincial... in the worst cases, they seem downright predjudiced, even xenophobic."
"Needless to say, the idea of adjusting to such a culture, the spectre of actually becoming like these people, is not instantly attractive. It's hard enough, under the best of circumstances, to be positive about home upon reentry, but when so much about home puts one off, readjustment is all the harder."
So all of that is very comforting. It's not just me! The author goes on to discuss what makes a place feel like "home", and a lot of the mixed-up emotions we can have around this when we're 'supposed' to be all excited about going home, but actually feel that home is somewhere else and the country we're returning to is... a little repellent.
That's the first two chapters. There are three more, and for me at least, they're worse than useless.
The problem I was having with all the material aimed at returning missionaries was that, as someone who isn't particularly religious and definitely isn't a missionary, I just couldn't relate to it. I don't feel like I have a particularly weird story... I went overseas to college, got my degree, worked, and came back nine years later, after a divorce. But this book isn't for me either. It assumes that you're a middle-aged business person sent overseas by your company for two or three years, with your wife and kids, to an exotic country where you have a big house and servants paid for on the company dime.
Sigh.
If that is your situation, there's plenty of advice here on how not to be put in a corner at work when you get back, how to support your angry teenagers, and how to get by while adjusting to *gasp* not having a household staff any more. Personally, it just made me feel like even more of a weirdo.
The final chapter is even devoted to "special populations" - people who have gone overseas for reasons other than opening up Widget Inc's Korea office. Missionaries, military, and teenagers on foreign exchange. Urgh. It sucks to have two chapters of "We understand exactly how you're feeling!" and three chapters of "Ha ha, you expected applicable advice? Sucker!"
I guess I'll keep looking.