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Book Reviews of The Future Homemakers of America

The Future Homemakers of America
The Future Homemakers of America
Author: Laurie Graham
ISBN-13: 9781841153131
ISBN-10: 1841153133
Publication Date: 6/5/2002
Pages: 392
Rating:
  • Currently 2.9/5 Stars.
 9

2.9 stars, based on 9 ratings
Publisher: Harpercollins
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

23 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

achadamaia avatar reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 48 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 6
A charming story of six women who meet up in England when their Air Force husbands get stationed there. The story spans several decades.
reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 4 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. Being a military brat myself I could relate to the young wives. My mother was one of them, it brought back many memories as a child growing up in a very tight knit extended family. It definitely was a unique experience.
SRussell
cmoh avatar reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 42 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I was a bit turned off by the title of this book but once I started into it, I realy liked it. Follows five women for about 4 decades, but don't try to determine who you are most like because there is a twist in every personality. Fun Quick beach read.
vprosser avatar reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 161 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
For five American Air Force wives, Norfolk, England, in 1952 is a long way from home. But Peggy Dewey and her friends are determined to make the most of their overseas mission. While their husbands patrol the skies in F-84 fighters, the high-spirited group of military wives and young moms stave off homesickness by clipping coupons, trading gossip, and going to London to see Princess Elizabeth "get coronated." Over a stick of Juicy Fruit, brass polisher Audrey Rudman, good-time girl Lois Moon, alcohol-loving Gayle Jackson, "Pie Crust Queen" Betty Gillis, and the ever reliable Peggy meet a scrappy Englishwoman named Kath Pharaoh and a lasting friendship is forged. Through marriage and divorce, separations and reunions, the gang will try to hold fast to one another...in a story that takes us to the heart of female friendship--and reveals the secret of the perfect Three Color Refrigerator Cake.
Readnmachine avatar reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 1474 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A group of women whose husbands are stationed at a remote airbase in England develop a friendship that carries them through decades and changes they never imagined. A quick read, but it takes forever to sort out the characters, their husbands, their children, and their various extended family members. Plus there's a romance at the very end that comes out of nowhere and just smacks of author-desperation to tie up every dangling loose end.
sweetiepetey avatar reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on
Helpful Score: 1
I expected this to be a bit of fluff. It was not that at all. To me this book was all about showing the continuing roller coaster of life. You go up, you go down and it never stops. The author highlighted this truth of mountains and valleys through the friendships of a group of women beginning when they are all young military wives in the 50's going into the 90's. It felt like the book just ended but I suppose it was meant to as the book was written with the continual ups and down of life. So in the end it said to me that the story ends here but thier lives continue on as ever.
reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 173 more book reviews
An engaging rendering of the friendships of four American women whose husbands are posted together in the air force in England. A testament to the endurance and salvation of friendship.
reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 5 more book reviews
Good story following the lifes of military wives and their unique bonds.
reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 3 more book reviews
good beach read about a group of friends
reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 11 more book reviews
A study of life-long friendships.
reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 6 more book reviews
This story is set in Norfolk, England in 1952 and is about the lives of five American Air Force wives.
reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 2 more book reviews
i enjoyed the characters in this book and found the british words interesting. The story kept me engaged , and i ordered another by that author.
reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 17 more book reviews
This book follows the life of Peggy Dewey and the women she meets as American Air Force wives in England following WWII. Shows how they adapt to the different directions their lives take them and the way they continue to support one another as they age. Light reading, but fun--lots of relational issues and observations on the way the world changed between the 1950s and 1990s.
reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 71 more book reviews
I loved this book about female friends in England during WW II
reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 54 more book reviews
This book follows the lives of Air Force wives who are stationed in Britian as the novel opens. They remain in touch throughout their lives.
reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 48 more book reviews
A great book that tracks the lives of five Air Force wives in 1952, from newlyweds to divorced, widowed, etc.
reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 68 more book reviews
I had a hard time getting into this book... so many characters... so many names... the women, their husbands, their children etc. etc. But in the end, I got enjoyed it. If you were ever a military wife or child, you will find yourself in this book.
reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 80 more book reviews
Good friends story!
reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 279 more book reviews
Great story of woman's struggle to move from the 'housewife of the 50's' into the capable woman of the 90's. Enduring friendships, trials and disappointments of family and relationships. A great piece of mind candy!
reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 27 more book reviews
A very good story.
mnorth avatar reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 32 more book reviews
Boring... I was looking forward to this story, but was so disappointed that I stopped reading after 60 pages. I couldn't relate to or like any of the characters.
reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 6 more book reviews
It had so much potential, but it just didn't quite get there. Still an intersting insite into the lives of military wives.
cranbery avatar reviewed The Future Homemakers of America on + 530 more book reviews
This was a wonderful book! The kind you wish you had not read it, so you could read it again!!!!