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137 pages, Kindle Edition
Published October 22, 2018
Hello everyone! I am both honored and a bit sad to host a review for Isolation Junction and a special message from its author today. I wish more voices could be heard and I admire Jennifer Gilmour for all her efforts to bring awareness on a difficult and still taboo subject.
Some issues are tricky to deal with, let alone to write about. It takes courage and support to address problems and talk about them. We can thank Jennifer Gilmour for standing up and lending her voice to the cause of domestic abuse.
I had no idea what to expect from Isolation Junction. I knew the story would not leave me unshaken but knowing and reading are two different things.
Rose is a scarred character in an impossible situation. Impossible is a scary word that looms over you when there is no escape door. Or rather, when the person supposed to be taking care of you and loving you closes the door and throws away the key. This book is about a prison with no walls.
The author taker her main character and gently leads her towards the window. Climbing the sill to get out seems easy for some of us, but for someone who has been belittled, mentally and or physically abused, and living in fear, either for weeks, months, or years, it is the biggest step. The hardest step. Because first, you have to find the strength to see that step, to recognize what is happening, to face your situation and put a name on it.
Isolation Junction reads like a diary of a story you have heard on the news without paying enough attention, something that happens behind closed doors, maybe in the house right next to yours. It is frightening and it is so close, so mundane. Yet, it still makes so many victims, it lurks in the dark, or even in plain daylight, but our societies are not ready to fully face the horrendous fate of women and men suffer from.
Taking the step to get out is possible with help, with care, with time, and with bravery. I have no doubt those in pain from domestic violence have more strength than many of us, I don’t doubt their reasons to stay, I cannot imagine what I would do in such a situation. This book doesn’t judge, it gives you a story among dozens, among hundreds. It explains just how difficult it is to escape, but most importantly, it gives hope. Rose’s feelings are simply and harshly put on the page for you to absorb, it is draining but necessary to get the slightest idea of what life is like in the shoes of all the Roses in our countries.
My heart was full of love for the support Rose gets throughout the story. Parents, siblings, friends, neighbors, the police, anyone in position to help can and should help. How easy for me to say. But the story reminded me that with a little help from everyone, everything is possible.
My only niggle was Tim. Like a lifebelt, he keeps Rose’s head from being pressured under water, but the quick way things happened made me uncomfortable and the fact Rose jumped from this abusive relationship to a new one, no matter how healthy, felt too much too soon. Still, I understand the need to cling to happiness, to someone genuinely caring, and live-saving. That independent side of me is to blame, I suppose J
Isolation Junction is a testimony for anyone here who has been in an abusive relationship or knows someone who has. It emphasizes the importance of support, and how much it takes for someone to set themselves free. Through the tears and the pain, Jennifer Gilmour offers hope and a golden key to a better life.