Family Lore by Gerard Windsor
WHA, 135 pp, $29.95 hb
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In the profusion of images in Gerard Windsor’s Family Lore one is particularly insistent. The surgical metaphor makes remembering an act of dismembering. It suggests control and precision, and ostensibly offers an antidote for messy feelings, which looks like a useful resource in the murky business of exhuming family ghosts. It also seems to satisfy an aspect of the narrator-personality that is reflected not only in the prose but also in little self-caricatures (such as his description of the fastidiousness with which knife and fork are used and put aside).
Family Lore by Gerard Windsor
WHA, 135 pp, $29.95 hb
ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.
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