Seasons of the Birch by Susan Puska
MWSA Review
Seasons of the Birch is the story of a young woman who grew up poor in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and left home to enlist in the U.S. Army Nurse Corps. By the time Ruth completed her training and deployed to the Philippines, it was April 1945. On returning from the Pacific Theater, she found that war veterans were not always honored, especially if they happened to be women. She returned to hospital work and eventually married a veteran, and that’s when the real troubles began. Seasons of the Birch follows the family through its struggles with joblessness, alcoholism, and abandonment. While many do not, this book addresses some of the difficulties faced by ordinary men and women who served selflessly and then struggled to assimilate into a society that looked different from the one they left behind.
Review by Betsy Beard (June 2021)
Author's Synopsis
Seasons of the Birch is a story of perseverance, sacrifice, and resilience. Susan Puska brings realism and heart to a novel that showcases the untold stories of women, minorities, and marginalized men who served their country yet seldom get the recognition they deserve.
Ruth Amundsen grew up poor in Michigan’s rural Upper Peninsula during the 1920s and 1930s. As she ventured beyond the village of Big Bay, she left her real home – the shores of Lake Superior. After nursing training, she joined the U.S. Army Nurse Corps, serving during the last year of World War II in the war-torn Philippines.
When she returns to post-war America, she finds her independence, sense of contribution, and hard-earned status as a war nurse of little value to a country seeking to get back to an outdated normal, whatever the cost. Her search for tranquility and family is tested as she returns to her beloved Northwoods. Can she adapt to the harsh realities she exchanged for returning north? Will she break from its icy weight or find her resilience like the birch tree after a long winter?
ISBN/ASIN: 9781636768120
Book Format(s): Soft cover, Kindle, ePub/iBook
Review Genre: Fiction—Historical Fiction
Number of Pages: 232