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Unmaking Grace

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Family secrets run deep for Grace, a young girl growing up in Cape Town during the 1980s. Her family secrets spill over into adulthood, and threaten to ruin the respectable life she has built for herself.

When an old childhood friend emerges after disappearing a decade earlier during a clash with apartheid riot police in the Cape Flats, where South Africa's coloured community makes its home, Grace's memories of her childhood come rushing back, and she is confronted, once again, with the loss that has shaped her. She has to face up to the truth or continue to live a lie—but the choice is not straightforward. Unmaking Grace is an intimate portrayal of violence, both personal and political, and its legacy on one person's life. It meditates on the long shadow cast by personal trauma, showing the inter-generational imprint of violence and loss on people's lives.

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    • Kirkus

      October 15, 2019
      A girl comes of age as South Africa transitions from apartheid to democracy and the violence of her home life parallels the terror of the outside world. Fourteen-year-old Grace falls for her neighbor Johnny, but their youthful romance is short-lived. Authorities of the apartheid regime detain Johnny during a raid of student protesters. Meanwhile, Grace's family life descends into chaos as her father's physical and emotional abuse escalates. By the time Nelson Mandela becomes president of a new South Africa and Johnny resurfaces more than a decade later, Grace has married her college sweetheart and become a mother. She has created the picture-perfect life, but her past proves too powerful to suppress. The first part of the novel takes place in 1985, unfolding from Grace's and her father's alternating points of view. Mary, Grace's mother, must figure out how to protect herself and Grace with few resources beyond her wits; Patrick, Grace's father, is full of a rage that consumes his hopes of ever being a decent family man. Grace, their only child, must make sense of how the people responsible for her well-being cause such harm. Part 2 is all about a grown-up Grace in 1997, and Boswell renders her conflicting emotions and actions with vivid language as Grace risks the new, safe life she has built to be with her first love. "Somewhere in her body, that body made up not of platelets and cells but of memory and forgetting, of love and the places that shape, a nerve jangled," Boswell writes as Grace and Johnny are reunited. The author does not hold back on how domestic violence operates, on how survivors of abuse, like Grace's father and Johnny, so often become perpetrators of abuse themselves. While the novel is not gratuitous, it is graphic; there are some harrowing scenes, but this book is not medicine that needs be swallowed because of the importance of the issues at hand. The novel creates drama while confronting intersecting systemic oppressions and intergenerational trauma by foregrounding its characters' needs, wants, wounds, and aspirations. The prose is taut with both clarity and complexity. A smart, compassionate portrayal of one woman's quest to end the cycle of violence.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      November 1, 2019
      Grace de Leeuw grows up under apartheid in 1980s Cape Town, trying her best to survive living with an abusive father. When a school protest turns violent, Grace's only friend, Johnny, disappears and is presumed dead. Soon after, her father murders her mother in a fit of rage. Years later, Grace is happily married with a newborn daughter and has kept her past hidden. One afternoon, Grace encounters Johnny on a commuter train, and the shock of seeing her first love sends her perfectly constructed life into chaos. A passionate affair develops, and Grace believes she has found the love she has craved since childhood. Sadly, Johnny isn't the person he seems. Boswell's debut explores the dark cycle of domestic violence, delving deep inside Grace's thoughts to uncover her motivations. Readers may be frustrated by Grace's actions, which are driven by spur-of-the-moment emotions rather than by consideration of the consequences. But Grace's mistakes are part of her healing, and the story ends on a lonely, yet hopeful, note. This complex story provides a firsthand view of the effects of domestic violence on women's lives.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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