This is one of the best books I've ever read, particularly non-fiction.
It is the story of Endell Street Military Hospital, in the Covent Garden area of London. Started in 1915 during the first World War, it was the only hospital founded by women, and where all of the medical staff (doctors, surgeons) and most of the administrative staff were women. It was started by Doctors Flora Murray and Louisa Garrett Anderson.
If you have any interest at all in women's history, medical history, and/or World War I, you should read this book. It outlines the struggles of women who were trained in the few programs available to them to become physicians. Once their training was finished, job opportunities were few and far between. The two women who founded Endell Street were also active in the suffrage movement, and during the war, proved without a doubt that women were capable of so much more than society wanted or expected them to be.
The book talks not just about the struggles of the two founders, but Britain's problems during the first world war, where to some extent, women became "allowed" to do jobs not open to them before out of necessity. Murray and Anderson started their journeys by volunteering to set up a hospital for France; once they made a success of it, the British Army took notice. And even though they were allowed to set up Endell Street, they still had to fight for so much, and were never really treated the same as male doctors and military hospitals. But in the end, they prevailed and were able to save many lives and treat hundreds upon hundreds of soldiers. When the war ended, they were still overcome by victims of the Spanish flu, and the hospital didn't actually close until December 1919.
The author introduces us to so many of the women who worked there, and gives us their stories. It's really a group of amazing people, literally operating in a world hesitant to accept them. The stories of both the women and the hospital are riveting, and full of so much information that is absorbed while reading the book that you don't even consciously realize that it's actual history.
To go into any detail would make this review way too long. So I will just say, you should read this book. It shows us how much has changed for women, and also (unfortunately) how much remains the same.