Exit Wounds: A Story of Love, Loss, and Occasional Wars
Peter’s mother is dying. Born in England and having spent most of her adult life as a doctor in Zimbabwe, she now lies on a hospital bed in the partitioned living room of his sister’s London apartment, her accent having overnight become posher than the Queen’s. Unsentimental, fiercely stubborn, and at times hilarious, she finally drops her guard, losing all fear of conflict to become the family provocateur.
While confronting the revelations of what his family was—and wasn’t—and the stoicism that sometimes threatened to destroy them, he also mourns the ending of his long marriage. At this point of rupture and healing, he reflects on his family’s legacy of exile and their tenuous hold on home.
In Exit Wounds: A Story of Love, Loss, and Occasional Wars, Peter Godwin considers, with both tenderness and candor, the relationship between son and mother, brother and sister, husband and wife. He examines the life of émigrés, exiles, and refugees, and grieves the many losses that make life both magnificent and unbearable. He brings us into the spaces which make us question, suffer, and celebrate the lives we have among family and friends, and the healing of our own wounds.