WWII: a time when the planet caught fire and God seemed to have turned his back on his children.
Today when disasters strike, religious extremists are quick to attribute them to God's wrath, directed at a secular people who've turned away from the Bible. But in December 1941, in the little town of Snohomish, Washington, the majority of the citizens were hard-working, pious, and patriotic. They prayed that the horrible war in Europe would spare them and their sons. Government officials were aware of the growing threat of the Japanese air force, but the attack on Pearl Harbor struck most Americans like a bolt of lightning.
Jonathan Beecher is devoted to his church, his family, and his community. He honors his commitments and keeps his word. A hard-working business owner, he takes pride in having supported his family even during the depths of the Great Depression. Now the economy is improving, but his family doesn't benefit.
His wife's death is a blow, but the rebelliousness of his sons and daughter is even harder to accept. He's a gentle man, but he believes that it's his responsibility to make the decisions for his family. His grown children don't agree.
While he's struggling with his headstrong off-spring, a new complication arises. A widow with a young daughter moves into town and he's attracted to her. She, too, has known sorrow and she understands his. Can they comfort each other or would that be a betrayal of their dead spouses?
Life goes on, even when a country is at war. But sons are taken away and put in danger and some never return. That shiny gold star to place in a front window is an "honor" that no family wants.
In the sense of wartime urgency, hasty marriages take place between young people who don't know much about each other. The results can be tragic and divorce isn't a easy option. The economy changes dramatically as industry gears up to produce airplanes and ships and tanks. Some businesses boom. Others fail.
What I know of American life during WWII comes from older relatives. My mother's first husband was serving in the Army Air Corps when his plane was shot down over Germany. He was officially declared dead a month after the birth of his daughter. My mother saved over 400 of his letters and she had 50 or so she wrote to him. There were heart-breaking letters to and from the wives and mothers of the flight crewmen. I read all of them and scanned them into my computer so that they could be shared with the family.
That experience gave me a fair grasp of what things were like at that time and I think this author has created a very plausible story line and authentic characters. I found a few anachronisms but he captures the flavor of a time when most Americans clung to a simple creed (faith, family, hard work) that had served them well for generations.
I have to believe that many of them were deeply shaken when a foreign war threatened everything they valued and loved and depended on. Like Jonathan, they must have felt that God had deserted them. Frankly, under those circumstances, only an idiot wouldn't question.
I enjoyed this book. The author writes well and he's created some nicely balanced characters. None of them is perfect, but with one exception they're decent and well-meaning. That doesn't mean they can't be mistaken or do harm to each other unintentionally. That's a given in human relationships anywhere at any time.
Sometimes the author belabors his points a bit and I would have edited out some of the details and cut it down 50-75 pages. But overall, it's a readable and frequently touching book.
Warning: the sons' war experiences are graphic and disturbing. You can skip those parts if you need to and stick to the gentler Home Front story without losing the thread.