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Home Fires Burning: Married to the Military--for Better or Worse

Release date: 1 March 2005
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Description

As taps echoes across the cookie-cutter housing areas of upstate New Yorks Fort Drum, the wives t... Read More

Product Description

As taps echoes across the cookie-cutter housing areas of upstate New Yorks Fort Drum, the wives turn on the evening news, both hoping for and dreading word of their husbands overseas. Its a ritual played out on military bases across the nation as the waiting wives of Karen Houpperts extraordinary new book endure a long, lonely, and difficult year with their husbands far from home. Houppert, a prize winning journalist, spent a year among these women, joining them as they had babies, raised families, ran Cub Scout troops, coached soccerand went to funerals.The waiting wives include Lauren, twenty-six, whose Navy SEAL husband was killed in Afghanistan; Heidi, peace activist and Army wife whose life is a daily struggle with her conscience; Crystal, a nineteen-year-old raising two babies on a shoestring while her husband fights in the Middle East; Tabitha, who becomes the alleged victim of murderous domestic violence at the hands of her Special Operations boyfriend; and Danette, once an Army brat and now a devoted Air Force wife, who teaches, raises two teens, and fills her days with endless volunteer work.Houppert shows that these women make some of the same sacrifices of their personal liberties as their husbands do and yet garner none of the respect accorded their spouses. Today, these military wives find themselves torn between an entrenched tradition that would keep them in a Leave It to Beaver family ideal and a modern social climate suggesting that women are entitled to morea career of their own, self-determination, and a true parenting partner.Meanwhile, the military concocts family-friendly policies and spends millions on new programs designed to appease military wivesand to maintain them as staunch supporters who will encourage their husbands reenlistment. The Army likes to say that it recruits soldiers, but retains families. And indeed, the future of the all-volunteer force hinges on the success of this mission. Though Army brass speak glowingly of the Army Family Team, this team is often deeply divided over strategyand even goals. A gritty, behind-the-scenes look at the tour of duty from the domestic front, Home Fires Burning provides a fascinating, fresh look at an enormous American institution and the families that live in its shadow.

Product Details

Title: Home Fires Burning: Married to the Military--for Better or Worse
Author: Karen Houppert
Publisher: BALLANTINE BOOKS
SKU: BK0060148
EAN: 9780345461698
Number Of Pages: 272
Language: English
Binding: Paperback
Release date: 1 March 2005

About Author

KAREN HOUPPERT was a contributing writer for The Washington Post magazine for many years. She also freelances for other magazines, covering social and political issues, and teaches in Masters in Writing Program at Johns Hopkins University and in the journalism department at Morgan State University. A former staff writer for The Village Voice for nearly ten years, she has won several awards for her coverage of gender politics, including a National Women's Political Caucus Award, a 2003 Newswomen's Club of New York Front Page Award--and was twice an ASME National Magazine Award finalist. She has won numerous fellowships, grants and residencies including the 2008 Kaiser Media Fellowship, multiple Nation Institute Investigative grants, a Casey Journalism fellowship, a MacDowell Colony residency, two Mabou Mines artist residencies, and a New York State Council on the Arts grant. Houppert's reporting has appeared in a wide variety of publications, including The Washington Post Magazine, The New York Times, Newsday, The Nation, Salon, Mother Jones, Ms, The Village Voice, The Detroit Free Press, Glamour, Mademoiselle, Redbook, Self, and Parenting. She is the author of three nonfiction books, a contributor to five, and co-author of the Obie-award winning play "Boys in the Basement" based on her trial coverage of the real-life rape in Glen Ridge, New Jersey--as well as several other plays. Her first book, The Curse: Confronting the Last Unmentionable Taboo, Menstruation (pub Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1999) is an investigation into the sanitary protection industry and cultural history of menstruation. Houppert's second book, Home Fires Burning: Married to the Military--for Better or Worse (pub Ballantine, 2005) chronicles a year in the life of various military wives whose husbands are deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan. An Air Force brat herself who grew up on military bases across the country, Houppert wrote this book in the early days of the War in Iraq. Her newest book is called "Chasing Gideon: The Elusive Quest for Poor People's Justice" and is a look at the sorry state of indigent defense in this country today. Published on the 50th anniversary of the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision, Gideon v. Wainwright, which established the right to counsel for the poor, Houppert's investigation reveals that American's are routinely denied this basic Constitutional right in courtrooms all across the country.

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