(7/9/2018)
I loved the title, and found applications for today's soldiers and nurses as they try to cope with life after battle...and PTS. This quote on p. 1 sets the tenor for the book: "There is a kind of man who, having been at war, finds peacetime intolerable...he hates the feeling that what he is doing is not important." This idea plays out through the novel, which is both witty and heartfelt. The settings are important characters in the book too, be it Ceylon, Pakistan, or England. All these settings reflect recovery from WWI and progress in every area of industry. The families try to adjust to these changing times, as the novel edges into WWII. The 4 McCosh sisters and their childhood friends lead the plot lines and themes of fidelity, fertility, the Empire, belief systems, and parental love. The book is very readable but the breadth of all the characters' experiences comes at the expense of depth. Told in brief chapters (50 in total), with various voices in each one, the story for me was not as continuous or chronological as I wanted it to be. I am not a fan of the ending.