When I Think Back, The War Letters of Fitje Pitts is challenging and rewarding. The book has a lot to offer but the reader has to step back to see the forest for the trees of the individual letters. Reflection allows the reader time to understand how important the letters were both for the recipients and the writer. The importance of connection in wartime, both to those around you and those at home, continues. When I Think Back is a wonderful example of someone trying to maintain those connections.
When I Think Back works on several levels. On one level the book is about Red Cross clubs and the service they provided in WWII, giving GIs a place to gather, relax, talk and escape the stress of the realities of war. It is also about the trials and rewards of running a club, as Fitje Pitts did. This level is the easiest to access.
On another level the book is the story of the impact of wartime service on a relatively young, upper middle class, single woman working for the Red Cross. Reading the letters faithfully in the order presented reveals Fitje Pitts growing in self-confidence, independence and self-awareness. She is a woman, among a small handful of females, living and working with hundreds of soldiers,while running a club in a wartime economy. Fitje needs to deal with GIs of all ranks and backgrounds, her staff of locals and the challenges of being in a world with air raids, rationing and limited availability of the comforts (like baths) she took for granted in the US. She grows not only to accept but even to embrace the challenges and deprivation she shares with those around her. She not only accepts but delights in the diversity of backgrounds she encounters, both among the GIs and among the locals.
On yet another level the book helps the reader feel the frustration created by wartime censorship of letters from Europe. The letters seem chatty rather than newsy with no substantive news about where the writer was and what military activities were going on around her. The frustration clearly was felt by Fitje’s family and friends. It msut be the same frustration felt by all the families at home hoping for news from their loved ones serving overseas. The letters present a lot of opportunities to read between the lines, just as all the readers on the homefront must have.