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Wait Softly Brother
Wait Softly Brother | Kathryn Kuitenbrouwer
1 post | 1 read | 1 to read
From lost siblings to the horrors of war to tales of selkie wives, Wait Softly Brother is filled with questions about memory, reality and the truths hidden in family lore. After twenty years of looping frustrations Kathryn walks out of her marriage and washes up in her childhood home determined to write her way to a new life. There she is put to work by her aging parents sorting generations of memories and mementos as biblical rains fall steadily and the house is slowly cut off from the rest of the world. Lured away from the story she is determined to write - that of her stillborn brother, Wulf - by her mother's gift of crumbling letters, Kathryn instead begins to piece together the strange tale of an earlier ancestor, Russell Boyt, who fought as a substitute solider in the American Civil War. As the water rises, and more truths come to the surface, the two stories begin to mingle in unexpected and beautiful ways. In this elegantly written novel Kuitenbrouwer deftly unravels the stories we are told to believe by society and shows the reader how to weave new tales of hope and possibility.
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TheKidUpstairs
Wait Softly Brother | Kathryn Kuitenbrouwer
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Woah. This is not going to be everyone's cup of tea, but it really worked for me. It is an odd but extremely compelling mix of metafiction, a dash of autofiction, historical fiction, and mythology.

Kathryn leaves her husband and children and travels to her childhood home, driven to write the story of her stillborn brother Wulf. Instead, she begins to compulsively tell the tale of her ancestor, Civil War substitute soldier Russel Boyt. Cont'd...

TheKidUpstairs In Kathryn's timeline, the rain won't stop falling, flood waters are rising, and she may or may not have found her great- something grandmother's selkie skin. In Russel's story within the story the horrors of war lead to madness and murder.

It is ambitious and weird and wonderful. It asks who can hold our memories and tell our stories, and what does it mean to connect ourselves to the past and the present.
8mo
68 likes2 comments