"Since You Went Away: World War II Letters from American Women on the Home Front", as you can guess from the title is an anthology of letters written by women to their men at war. From the description at Barnes and Noble:
Quote:
Drawn from a large archive of wartime correspondence, Since You Went Away collects hundreds of letters written by women of all backgrounds and ages from all over the United States: from Midwestern farms to the Hawaiian Islands, from young girls to anxious mothers. The letters are sometimes touching, sometimes anguished, and always packed with intimate glimpses of the World War II era. With men on the frontlines, women took to repairing cars, balancing budgets, and responding with imagination to all kinds of hardships and wartime shortages ("I stopped at the Piggly Wiggly but could not get fresh meat of any kind, so found that Spam fried in butter made a very tasty Easter dinner."). An entire section is devoted to courtship, so much of which took place through the mail, and another chapter concentrates on letters written by women about their experiences at work ("The more I see of war plants the more I believe that they're dragging this damn war out as long as possible on purpose...here it seems as tho' they have so much money they don't know what to do with it."). Nor does this collection spare the pain women felt upon learning about the loss of their husbands, lovers, or sons. A pictorial essay gives readers a further window into the war, displaying images, cartoons, and posters. One poster reads: "Be With Him at Every Mail Call," giving an idea of just how important letters were to the men and women of this time.
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inconceivable!
you can read this but not The Wizard Knight?!
Naturally
The home front is a somewhat neglected aspect of the human condition during wartime.
Which reminds me, Criterion are about to release the very famous massive Japanese film "The Human Condition" on DVD
This is very good as the previous DVDs were either an American one with a shocking transfer (2.35 ratio in low res 4:3 mode), or a fairly decent French release that had no English subs.
But no word of any BluRay!
hysterical
in his hysteria, Tigger has taken to talking gibberish.
More changing the subject.
More changing the subject.
yes you did
I brought up the subject of The Wizard Knight, and you changed the subject.