what is the theme of the novel THE BREAK
Answers
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The Break is a devastatingly beautiful novel that depicts the bonds between the women of an extended Indigenous family. With warp and weft, Vermette weaves together the voices of numerous intergenerational women to tell their personal stories as they deal with the enduring after-effects of trauma.
Answer:
Explanation:
The story is told though the shifting perspectives of its characters, each viewpoint revealing truths about the others while building a complex history of four generations of an indigenous family. These are characters that live and breathe: from Flora, the clan’s matriarch, who has lived through fostering and an abusive husband to raise her family; to her great-granddaughter Emily, the young girl attacked at the start of the book; to Emily’s aunt Stella, who witnesses the attack and calls the police rather than try to stop it, and later becomes racked by guilt when she finds out it was her niece. There are a dozen perspectives, but each is so masterfully realized that, by the end of the novel, it seems as though you know these characters and have shared their trials.