Ratings2
Average rating4.5
As America enters WWII, two women on the home front strive to stay strong in a heartfelt novel about hope, friendship, and family by the bestselling author of Yellow Crocus and Golden Poppies. Kay Lynn Brooke is a wife and mother in Berkeley, California, building a solid future with her husband and family. Then on December 7, 1941, the bombing of Pearl Harbor throws Kay Lynn's life, and the lives of everyone she knows and loves, into chaos. Within weeks, Kay Lynn's dearest friend, Kimiko, is forcibly relocated with her family to an internment camp. Kay Lynn's brother, fortified with a youthful and patriotic spirit, ships out for the Pacific. Her husband enlists ahead of the draft and leaves home for basic training, while Kay Lynn's sister works for the war effort on the home front--and holds a secret that places her in a different kind of danger. As Kay Lynn struggles to parent, keep the household together, and challenge the social mores of the time, she both finds and gives strength through her letters to Kimiko. Over the next few uncertain years, and longing for the safe and simple clarity of the past, Kay Lynn has no choice but to find her own place and purpose in a rapidly changing world.
Reviews with the most likes.
Falling Wisteria by Laila Ibrahim
Pearl Harbor had a huge effect on the USA but none more so than the Japanese Americans all forced to leave their homes. Kay Lynn had to watch her best friend Kimiko and her family end up in an internment camp. The men in her life are going to war and she has to find a way to make it in the world that is rapidly changing.
It's a really great historical fiction. It was well written and the pace was great. I could feel the anxiety and anguish coming off the page where Kay Lynn was concerned and I really felt like the author did an excellent job of keeping true to the realities of history while writing a beautiful story of friendship and survival.
4 stars