Valiant women The extraordinary American servicewomen who helped win World War II

Lena S. Andrews

Book - 2023

In this groundbreaking new history of the role of American women in World War II, a top military analyst for the CIA presents the inspiring, shocking and heartbreaking stories of these servicewomen that reveal a fundamental misunderstanding of the nature of combat in the war and illustrates important realities about modern warfighting.

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Subjects
Genres
History
Published
New York : Mariner Books [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Lena S. Andrews (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
ix, 351 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 303-332) and index.
ISBN
9780063088337
  • Organizational Chart of US Military Women's Programs
  • Prologue: "Thank You for Even Thinking of Me"
  • Introduction: "America Will Be as Strong as Her Women"*
  • Part I. The Problem
  • 1. "The Fighting Filipinos": The War Arrives
  • 2. "They Can't Do Any More, but You Can": The Arsenal of Democracy
  • 3. "I'm in This War Too!": Women's Army Auxiliary Corps
  • 4. "Release a Man to Fight!": Building the WAAC
  • 5. "Bring Him Home Sooner, Join the WAVES": Women Accepted for Voluntary Emergency Service
  • 6. "Wish I Could Join Too!": Building the WAVES
  • 7. "Your Duty Ashore, His Afloat": Marine Corps Women's Reserve and Coast Guard SPARS
  • 8. "The Army Air Forces Want You!": Women's Airforce Service Pilots
  • 9. "Are You a Girl with a Star-Spangled Heart?": Recruiting and Training WAACs
  • 10. "Learn a Skill You'll Value All Your Life: Black Women Join the WAAC
  • 11. "That Was the Day I Joined the WAVES": Recruiting and Training Sailors
  • 12. "The Girl of the Year Is a SPAR": SPARS and MCWR Recruitment and Training
  • 13. "If You Want to Fly": Recruiting and Training the WASPs
  • 14. "Someone Talked!": Rumors
  • Part II. The Solution
  • 15. "Going Where We're Needed Most!": North Africa
  • 16. "Don't Miss Your Great Opportunity": Italy
  • 17. "Which One of These Jobs Would You Like?": Stateside Service
  • 18. "Have You Got What It Takes to Fill an Important Job Like This?": Disappointment and Disillusionment
  • 19. "Make a Date with Uncle Sam": Controversy
  • 20. "Now Is the Time to Investigate the Opportunities Offered Court-Martials
  • 21. "Give Us More P-47's": WASPs in the Field
  • 22. "WACs Are Going Places!": France
  • 23. "I'd Rather Be with Them-Than Waiting": Europe
  • 24. "Blueprint for Victory": The Pacific
  • 25. "To Make Men Free": Victory Won
  • Epilogue: "Good Soldier"
Review by Booklist Review

World War II saw over 400,000 women serve in America's armed forces, doing everything from nursing and piloting to laying cables and transmitting vital secret intelligence. Valiant Women details the essential yet largely forgotten roles women played on the global stage as WWII raged on. Each branch of the military saw women vying for inclusion during WWII, a time when military service largely excluded them. The beginnings of the WAAC, WAVES, SPARS, Marine Corps Women's Reserve, and Women's Airforce Service Pilots are all outlined, the stories of their founding women brilliantly told. Firsthand interviews with living veterans and photographs spread throughout the text bring the lives, service, sacrifice, and the struggle for military inclusion of everyday women beautifully to life. The hurdles and grievances of being a woman in the military are explored in depth, including the specific struggles women of color and LGBTQ+ women had to face. Handy organizational charts of WWII women's U.S. military programs are invaluable. Binge-able and easily approachable for those new to the subject, this book is perfect for WWII buffs and readers of history, military history, women's history, and feminist nonfiction.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Military analyst Andrews debuts with an enlightening revisionist history spotlighting combat support by women in WWII. In addition to working in factories, offices, and depots around the country, more than 350,000 women served in the WAACs (Women's Army Auxiliary Corps), the WAVES (Women Accepted for Volunteer Service), and other all-female corps. They brought tenacity, patience, and charismatic leadership to their roles, Andrews writes, but they earned half of what men were paid, were not assigned ranks, and were subject to a code of conduct stricter than the men's. The book's subjects served, among other roles, as advisers, cryptologists, draftswomen, nurses, oceanographers, spies, teachers, and transporters. For example, Charity Adams led the Black women of the 6888th Central Postal Battalion who broke up the massive backlog of mail sent to soldiers at the Battle of the Bulge; test pilot Florene Miller flew planes across the United States to prepare them for missions overseas; and instrument mechanic Jessie Kontrabecki repaired planes for the Navy before training men to fly them. Through interviews with the few servicewomen still alive and comprehensive research, Andrews takes an ingenious look at WWII "in a different way." It's a must-read for women's and military history buffs. (Aug.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

By the end of the World War II, more than 350,000 U.S. women had served in uniform in several auxiliary units created by the military. Sometimes that meant being mere miles away from the front lines. In her first book, CIA military analyst Andrews explores the vital roles that women filled--pilots, machinists, instructors, chemists, codebreakers, weather observers, and more--in the Army Air Corps' Women Airforce Service Pilots, the Navy's Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service, the Coast Guard's Semper Paratus--Always Ready, and the Marine Corps' Women's Reserve. These organizations experienced growing pains as their commanders, newly minted women officers, fought stubborn and suspicious men over their worth and capabilities. The women faced harassment by men who were military personnel and questions about their morals and sexuality. In addition to that, Black volunteers battled racism. Based on interviews, memoirs, and extensive archival research, this engaging book offers a wide-ranging look at women's contributions to the war effort. VERDICT Readers interested in women's and military history, especially World War II events and experiences, will value this book.--Chad E. Statler

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The extraordinary achievements of women serving during World War II. Andrews, a military analyst at the CIA, has interviewed many of the last remaining survivors of the war effort, and she also incorporates many other first-person accounts written over the years. Her work encompasses all of the official U.S. programs created during the war years to incorporate women in the military. These included the Women's Army Corps, the Women's Airforce Service Pilots, the Marine Corps Women's Reserves, the Navy's Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service, and the Coast Guard Women's Reserve. Though her focus remains on the impressive achievements of the women on the battlefield, she also amply delineates the contribution to the "unstoppable" manufacturing effort across the country by noncombatant forces. "By one account," she writes, "women composed nearly forty percent of the workers in war industries by 1944 and, at their peak, made up thirty-five percent of the overall labor force, a ten percent increase from before the war." Ultimately, noncombatant forces "were a critical, though often unseen and underappreciated, element of battlefield operations." Andrews begins with the Army and Navy nurses stationed in the Philippines and at Pearl Harbor, the first women in uniform to participate in the war effort. The author creates a host of illuminating biographical portraits, including that of Oveta Culp Hobby, the enormously influential head of WAC who helped convince Congress to authorize the program, with the support of Eleanor Roosevelt and Army Chief of Staff Gen. George Marshall. Andrews also explores the media's efforts to undermine women servicemembers with questions about uniforms, the inclusion of Black women, and trumped-up accusations of lesbianism and indecency. The author shows how the Navy and Marines very reluctantly fell in line and how the sterling contributions of thousands of women eventually convinced most skeptics. It's a welcome celebration of military heroes who deserve more recognition. An invaluable addition to our knowledge of the Allied victory. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.