Showing posts with label clubmoble girls. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clubmoble girls. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Extraordinary in the Ordinary By Eleri Grace

A “superhero” is a fictional character with extraordinary or superhuman powers or an exceptionally skilled or successful person.

Rather than paying tribute to the numerous actual people who populate my life and have exceptional or superhuman perseverance, strength, and empathy for others, I decided to write today about a group of women who straddle both worlds in a sense.  The heroines of my Clubmobile Girls novels are fictional, yet they are rooted firmly in our documented history. Based on the thousands of women who answered the call to wartime service with the American Red Cross, my heroines have a strong sense of duty and patriotism, resilience, an adventurous and independent streak, and exceptional courage.

Courage is the first word in the title of my first Clubmobile Girls novel, and it is the attribute my heroines call forth more than any other. As all good fictional characters do, my heroines must summon their mental strength to withstand and extricate themselves and others from dangerous situations. But my heroines evidence mettle from the beginning, way before they are in any sort of perilous situation. Indeed, they have built up and drawn on an enormous reservoir of tenacity before my readers meet them. Of course, most American women served in some capacity during WWII, whether working in a factory or defense plant, enlisting in one of the auxiliary military service units, volunteering with the USO, the Red Cross, or a local hospital, or tending a victory garden and economizing in her household. But the women who secured overseas assignments with the American Red Cross evinced particularly exceptional spirit and drive.

Well before the first women shipped out, before their overseas work was operational, the Red Cross intuited that the women who would organize and staff their clubs and mobile units all over the world must be self-starters with stamina, confidence, and adaptability.
Most of the women who applied (only one in six would be successful) were poised, charming, and accomplished professionals who could draw on a varied life experience. They were good conversationalists who could hold their own in a male-dominated environment, who could laugh at a dirty joke but retain “girl next door” respectability, who could offer comfort and stability to both the homesick and shell-shocked soldiers. But it was her inner fortitude that likely won her the job, and it will be that same strength that will see her through it all.

Stand in her shoes and close your eyes. It’s 1942, and you’ve just signed on for the duration.
You don’t know where you will be posted (a bomber base in southeast England or in the large cities of southeast Australia, a club in Algiers, Calcutta or Chungking, a train serving men working in the deserts of Persia, a naval base in Iceland or Cuba) or what your day-to-day work will entail. You don’t know when you might next see your parents or family and friends. Tied to that, of course, is the dawning realization that you don’t know what the “duration” actually means. You have no crystal ball that shows a return to normalcy by 1946. You don’t know yet how the war years will shape and change you profoundly, how those years more than any others will stand out as having been the most meaningful of your entire life. But you know one thing for certain: you wouldn’t trade this opportunity to serve your country with courage for anything.

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Learn more about me and my writing on my website, and you can also find me on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and Instagram

Saturday, June 29, 2019

A Love Affair with WWII by Eleri Grace

Tanamera by Noel Barber

Following on from Margaret Tanner’s WWI novels and Anna Brentwood’s 1920s settings, I’m excited to share what drew me to set my novels in WWII and then tell you more about my amazing heroines.
With an undergraduate history degree concentration in 20th century history and a life-long passion for WWII fiction, it now seems clear I was destined to write novels set during this dramatic time period. Even in elementary school, I gravitated toward historical fiction set during WWII. I still own well-worn paperback copies of Summer of My German Soldier and Farewell to Manzanar. But it was in high school, after devouring Herman Wouk’s Winds of War and War and Remembrance multiple times that I discovered author Noel Barber.  I was immediately captivated by the combination of romance and thriller-packed action in a WWII setting in his novels. If you’re now curious why I own 8 copies of Barber’s novel , Tanamera, you can discover the answer here!  
My Tanamera collection

Fast-forward several decades: I had completed a “practice novel” and was anxious to begin my writing career, preferably with a historical romance setting. Trouble was, I had no interest in Regencies or kilted highlanders (with the obvious exception of Jamie Fraser of Outlander fame). I believed the heady combination of the era’s glamour and larger-than-life stakes could provide the perfect backdrop for heart-melting and passionate romance novels.  To brainstorm what my hypothetical WWII romance heroines might have done -- and in particular what might have taken them overseas near the action (and the heroes!) -- I consulted Our Mothers’ War. Yellin profiled numerous ways that American women served overseas, but the one I’d never heard about intrigued me most: the thousands of “Red Cross Girls” who were deployed in every theater of the war.  
RECRUITING POSTER

These women who worked for the Red Cross met extraordinary qualifications for the time period. To interview, a woman needed to be aged 25-35, have earned a college degree, and have some career experience. Common character attributes paint a picture of an even more accomplished woman: poised, charming, strong conversational skills, self-assured, independent, adaptable, and possessing ingenuity, creativity and stamina. The Red Cross also wanted women who could hold their own in a male-dominated environment, women who could project a complex persona of big sister/girl-next-door with just a dollop of sex appeal. 

DEBARKING SHIP
The Red Cross Girls, as they were then known, served as recreation workers in Europe (initially England and then moving across the Channel after D-Day to follow the troops through France and into Germany (as my heroine Vivian does in Courage to be Counted.
 Mediterranean regions (moving from North Africa into Italy), the Pacific (initially Australia and New Zealand and then island-hopping behind the boys to New Guinea, Guadalcanal, Biak, Guam, Saipan, Tinian, the Philippines, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa), China, Burma, India, Persia, Iceland, Greenland, Canada, Alaska, Brazil, Panama, and Cuba.  The Red Cross Girls often served closer to the front lines than even the combat nurses.  
IN AND OUT OF THE BATTLE LINES
As George Korson’s At His Side notes, “These Red Cross clubmobile girls had one of the most extraordinary experiences of the war, performing an unprecedented service with enthusiasm and a contempt for personal danger that had the whole Army tossing its helmets into the air. They had a ringside seat at one of the greatest dramas of all time, moving with more freedom than many soldiers. Even war correspondents could not drive in and out of the battle lines as they did every day.” 
They opened and staffed recreation clubs in leave destinations and on military bases, drove Clubmobiles (converted buses, GMC trucks, Jeeps) to deliver doughnuts, coffee, cheer and conversation to small bases and behind the advancing troops in every theater of the war.
They used “duckmobiles” to serve Navy ships and other vessels in harbors around the world, met every troopship and troop train, staffed leave and rest hotels, and provided recreation services to recuperating soldiers in hospitals. 
They were courageous and extraordinary women in every way, and I hope you’ll want to read their stories in my Clubmobile Girls series. I hope to release the second book early next year.

ABOUT ELERI:  
WW2 AUTHOR ELERI GRACE
Eleri Grace writes historical romance novels featuring Red Cross Girl heroines and Flyboy heroes. She hopes her novels will reflect her passion for the 1940s era and that her readers will come away with an appreciation for the many couples who were swept up in war-time courtships forged in a time of larger-than-life uncertainties. 
Before penning her first novel, Eleri honed her writing skills as a corporate lawyer, a historical researcher, and an avid writer and reader of fan fiction.

She lives in Houston, Texas with her teenage son, her soon-to-depart-for-college daughter, and two feuding cats.
To learn more about Eleri Grace and her books, visit her at her website:
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COURAGE TO BE COUNTED 
Vivian Lambert wants to do her part. When she wins a coveted overseas post with the Red Cross, she focuses on her war service. Falling hard for a sexy pilot wasn't part of her plan.