As World War II rages abroad, a group of women forge the bonds of sisterhood in America
In 1938, while tensions in Europe are reaching a boiling point, four young women with big ambitions enter secretarial school in San Francisco. Motivated to attain the financial stability that eluded their parents, they go to battle for their futures. Moira, of Scottish descent, dreams of being an actress. Ann yearns for the education her Jewish immigrant parents provided for her brother, but not for her. Japanese American Wanda experiences firsthand the racial injustices running rampant in the United States. And Teddy, who left the Dust Bowl for sunny California, comes to startling realizations about herself as the war progresses. These women will be both buoyed and challenged by their dreams, experiencing love, loss, and everything in between. Against the backdrop of a nation gripped by fear and paranoia, Miner eloquently captures the spirit of wartime on the home front.
Originally published by Crossing Press in 1987.
“With laudable perceptiveness, Miner probes issues that are as relevant today as they were forty years ago: the rampant bigotry that deprives Wanda of her father and her liberty; Moira’s uncertain sexual orientation; Ann’s wariness of commitment; and Teddy’s adjustment to her own homosexuality. The novel’s rewarding conclusion also has contemporary overtones, for the women’s hard-won ‘shared sense of potential’ finally guides them safely beyond ‘anguish and loss’ to equanimity.”?—Los Angeles Times
“An extraordinary tale of women in wartime. Most novels set in the ’40s are about men fighting World War II. This one is unique in that the protagonists are four young women.” —San Jose Mercury News
“On the huge canvas of World War II we follow the lives and friendships of four women. We follow with passionate interest these interrelated but widely different stories, and as the four women grow, we grow with them. A complex, nourishing work of art.” —May Sarton
“An exceptionally good novel that realistically depicts the personal trauma faced by four young, working-class women at the outbreak of World War II.” —Booklist
“Finally, a World War II novel written from the perspective of women’s lives—and not Hollywood starlets waiting for Johnny to come marching home. All Good Women gives us a broader understanding of an era as well as a deeper awareness of the significance of social forces in our own lives.” —The Seattle Times