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Our Fathers

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Set on a remote Scottish island, this “piercing, vivid, and humane story depict[s] the long aftermath of extreme domestic violence” (Kirkus Reviews).
Nobody knows why John Baird, a quiet family man, took it into his head one day to pick up a shotgun and murder his wife and children. On the Scottish island of Litta, violent crime is unheard of, and the killings send shockwaves through this tiny community in which the Bairds were well-known and liked.
 
Tommy, the only survivor of the terrible crime, has come back to Litta many years later. Faced with this reminder of the horrors that took place amongst them, the community must ask themselves again if anyone can truly know their neighbors. What drives a man to murder his own family? And to what extent is Tommy his father’s son?
 
With unflinching candor and powerful prose, Our Fathers interrogates the damaging legacy of toxic masculinity, and reveals how family can both wound us and help us heal.

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    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2020
      Twenty years after a blood bath consumed his family, the only survivor returns to the scene of the crime in an effort to clear the roadblock of the past from his psyche. Litta, a small island off the coast of Scotland, is a "dark hunk of rock, braced against the wind and the endless rain," a persuasive setting for this grimly compelling tale. Here, John Baird, a contemptuous, angry man hidden beneath a veneer of controlled charm, surprised Litta's tiny community one day by massacring his family--wife Katrina, son Nicky, and daughter Beth, everyone except his less-favored son, Tommy--and then killing himself. John's brother, Malcolm, still lives on Litta, and it's on his doorstep that Tommy turns up unannounced two decades later, his education, jobs, and girlfriends having failed to pull him into a future beyond the trauma of his family's tragedy, his father's taint, and his own pained regrets. Wait (The Followers, 2017, etc.) delivers these events in a narrative that is limpid and frill-free, in keeping with the book's elemental setting. Delving into John's psychology, and Malcolm's, and their father's before them, she paints a picture of traditional, often unpredictable, disappointed men and their low-level, slowly corrosive abuse of their wives. This generational connection serves its explanatory purpose, but another of the story's challenging forces is Litta itself, beautiful but isolated and ceaselessly testing its inhabitants' characters. Memory, masculinity, and survivor's guilt are picked apart as the novel treads its path, dodging sensationalism and easy resolutions while evoking haunted, inarticulate people in a relentless landscape. A piercing, vivid, and humane story depicting the long aftermath of extreme domestic violence.

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 20, 2020
      Wait (The Followers) offers a thoughtful and wrenching portrait of a small Scottish town wracked by guilt over an incident of domestic violence. At 31, Tommy Baird returns to the Scottish island of Skellag after years of absence, following the murder-suicide of his mother, Katrina, and his two siblings by his father in 1994 when Tommy was a young boy; he survived by hiding in a wardrobe. Tommy stays with his uncle, Malcolm, despite Malcolm’s reservations due to Tommy’s violent tendencies as a pugnacious adolescent. Wait adroitly maps the craggy psychological terrain beneath Tommy and Malcolm’s loaded silences, using Malcolm’s difficulty in making conversation as a means to explore the shame of inaction as his brother abused Tommy’s family for years. Malcolm’s thoughts are mirrored by the reaction of Fiona, a town busybody who grapples with regrets for not helping when Katrina asked for aid to escape her husband. Wait builds tension through cyclical repetition of the characters’ ruminations as they try to undo the past while revealing more of their own part in what happened. Fans of Patrick McCabe and Jon McGregor will appreciate Wait’s melancholic snapshot.

    • Booklist

      February 1, 2020
      The residents of the tiny, windswept Scottish isle of Litta are shocked when native son John kills his wife and two of their three children before turning the gun on himself. Twenty years later, surviving son Tommy returns to the island. A lost and discomfited soul, he stays with Uncle Malcolm, who can provide no answers for his brother's fatal actions. The two orbit each other warily, engulfed in silence. Tommy's presence unsettles the islanders, who stumble over their words to welcome him while trying to avoid speaking of the past. Told in both present day and flashback, through multiple characters' viewpoints, the novel reveals the burdens of guilt characters carry regarding what they might have done to prevent the murder-suicide or help Tommy in the aftermath. Malcolm realizes that "the warning only appeared after the event; it was only revealed by the event." But for another character, there was warning?and reason to feel guilt. Wait's (The Followers, 2017) insights into the human heart are beautifully observed, and her second novel deserving of a wide readership.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2020, American Library Association.)

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