It's the late 1960s. You're a housewife with a few little kids, and you're bored. And lonely. One day, at the playground, you strike up a conversation with someone else similar to yourself. This happens a few more times, and voila! You have the premise of The Wednesday Sisters.
Five women make up the Wednesday Sisters. There's Frankie the narrator, Brett, Kath, Ally, and Linda. Each is married to a successful man, and each struggles with her own lack of "things to do" because they're each intelligent. They begin by just visiting at the playground and meeting to watch Miss America. But then it turns into more. They each decide to start writing. As you might guess, most of them achieve success with their writing, some in spectacular ways. One faces a health crisis. Another encounters racial prejudice. One husband has an affair. In short, life happens.
The ladies' personal stories are interwoven with the events of the day -- Vietnam, the moon landing, the turbulence of the '60s, etc.
Some quotes I marked:
*"We hadn't yet learned that our best writing comes from pushing our emotional buttons with the kind of force needed to push that rocket ship into space."
*"Memory is an unmerciful thing sometimes."
*and, humorously: "I was glad I'd gotten to know her before I saw her house." (in this instance, because the woman was richer than Frankie had suspected and her house was palatial)
My main annoyance with the book was the way Frankie narrated it as she looks back at the events of the day from the current time. She does the expected shaking of her head, mentioning how "we didn't know any better back then," "we couldn't imagine that America might be wrong," etc. I wish more authors would just accept the events of a certain time without trying to superimpose 2018 sensibility onto them.
The book was undeniably well-written, though. And it made me wish for a tight-knit group of friends like the group in the book. "It makes me a little sad when I look back on it, to think how very many women didn't have Wednesday Sisters, to wonder who they might have become if they had."