Nothing like the movie, but is that surprising?
I actually enjoyed the fact that this book was nothing like the movie ("A Will of Their Own" with Lea Thompson), and it's one of the few times that I could enjoy both despite their differences.
The book, originally published as "Daughters of the New World," follows five generations of women through the very end of the 19th century and through most of the twentieth. Anna, an immigrant from Wales, moves to the US to be a housemaid to an uppercrust Washington, D.C. family only to marry their son. Public, er, shame prompts the couple to move to Wisconsin, where Anna gives birth to Amanda and dies not long after. Amanda grows up with on the Chippewa reservation in Ashland, has a love affair with a childhood friend named Flat Mouth that lasts a lifetime, disguises herself as a man to photograph WW1, has a child that she promptly carts everywhere for her work, and lives to the age of 90. Sara picks up the torch in the 1940s as a wife, mother, hotel proprietor and alcoholic who is a foil to strong-minded but emotionally distant Amanda. Sara's daughter, Eleanor, is a warmer but equally strong and smart version of Amanda. Eleanor is probably the best-developed and most likable character in the story, as Amanda's larger-than-life disposition and Sara's quiet desperation make both of them difficult to identify with. Finally, the story concludes with Eleanor's daughters, Lily and Kat, carving a way for themselves in the 1980s and 1990s.
The characters in the book definitely feel like real people instead of archetypes, so keep that in mind. If you enjoy books of that sort, give this one a whirl.