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Enemy

Enemy 1

by Ruth Clare
Paperback
Publication Date: 29/02/2016
4/5 Rating 1 Review

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**Joint Winner of the 2017 Asher Award**

Ruth Clare's father came back from the Vietnam War a changed man: a violent, controlling parent and a dominating, aggressive husband.

Through a childhood of being constantly on guard, with no one to protect her but herself, Ruth learned to be strong and fierce in the face of fear.

After escaping her difficult upbringing, Ruth went on to have a family of her own.

Facing the challenges of parenting brought her past back to life, and she lived in fear that she was doomed to repeat her father's behaviour.

Wanting to understand the experiences that had damaged her father, she met with other veterans and began listening to their stories, of war, conscription, returning to civilian life.

What Ruth uncovered left her with a surprising empathy for the man who caused her so much pain and heartache.

Weaving a striking personal narrative with a revelatory exploration of the effects of war, Enemy is a bold, compelling and ultimately triumphant memoir from a hugely impressive new Australian writer.

'Ruth Clare brings history into the home with piercing intelligence, unflinching honesty and total, terrifying recall. By drawing a direct line from the violence of war to the brutality of domesticity, Enemy refuses to excuse the tormentor yet tries to understand the legacy of torment. I wanted this book to stop and I couldn't put this book down.' - Clare Wright, author of the Stella Prize-winning The Forgotten Rebels of Eureka

ISBN:
9780670079094
9780670079094
Category:
Vietnam War
Format:
Paperback
Publication Date:
29-02-2016
Publisher:
Penguin Australia Pty Ltd
Edition:
1st Edition
Pages:
320
Dimensions (mm):
234x155x23mm
Weight:
0.41kg

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I picked up this book expecting to be told a story about the events of the Vietnam War. Instead, what Ruth Clare has written is something more terrifying and explosive than any war book I’ve read in years.

This book is her own very personal account of life in a family being gradually broken down by the open wounds of Ruth’s father’s national service. The terrible beauty of the writing is that she stays firmly in the voice and mind of her childhood self in her account, having never been taught about the war and knowing only in retrospect that her father’s physical and psychological abuse was result of Post-Traumatic Stress.

Somehow there is always a cool and controlled reflection in these episodes of a family horror story. The prose, while bone-chilling and riveting, glows with real love in every page, ultimately completing a quest for hope in the next generation of the author’s family. This book is the fantastic untold story of the battles fought decades after and thousands of miles from the Vietnam War we think we know. It should be read and shared by all.

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