In 1942, Beth Pierce was completing her
internship in the new discipline of occupational therapy in a Baltimore hospital
where she meets Jim, a conscientious objector who is training to become a medic.
They share a love of poetry and the arts. He goes off to war and serves in the foxholes
and trenches of the dreadful conditions at the front. She stays in North
America serving in rehabilitation with the war wounded – young men damaged
physically and mentally from the great trauma. Until 1945, they exchange a
remarkable series of letters that describe the war, their parallel work with
the war wounded, their hopes for the future, and gratitude for each other’s
thoughts. The letters always close with “Please write.”