Friday 3 November 2017

Clipped Wings by Jennifer Gilmour - Blog Tour Review


After a small hiatus due to Life Of A Nerdish Mum HQ moving house at the weekend, I am back and I am honoured today to be part of the blog tour for Clipped Wings by Jennifer Gilmour. Clipped Wings is a collection of stories from survivors of domestic abuse, so if this may be upsetting for you, please do not continue on with this post. 

Clipped Wings

The silent chorus.
Just imagine you thought that you had met the man or woman of your dreams. This person was charming and you thought they were the one or perhaps that this was fate; it was just meant to be.
But as the months go by things start to change. Their behaviour towards you isn’t the same, they are more critical, more particular about your appearance, what you do, how you do it, who you see. Time goes by and you feel isolated from your friends and family because that behaviour has now changed to threats, maybe violence and you feel that your identity is all but gone. But still you stay. Where would you go? Who would help you? You are not worthy.

But you are.

A group of survivors have spoken about their own experiences. In their own words they show that survivors do have a voice and that it needs to be heard. They show that abuse isn’t unique or strange but that it is, unfortunately, a surprisingly common problem in today’s society.

The message of this book is one of courage, as with courage comes awareness and an ability to understand what has happened to you and take the steps needed to become a survivor yourself.

My Review

Reviewing Clipped Wings has been quite difficult, not only for the content and subject matter, but as to how I would actually review the book. Being a collection of survivors accounts in their own words means that I couldn't review it in the manner I normally would and so I am going to try my best to do it justice.

Leaving each story in each survivors own words I think was a potentially problematic approach, but one that ended up working extremely well. As each person is from a different place with their own vernacular, it could have made reading the book harder than just the content due to it not flowing as well. However the use of the survivors own words and language makes each story even more personal and the emotions are extremely raw and stark. Allowing the people to explain in their own way gave them power in my opinion. 

Each experience from the survivors (both male and female) are all incredibly different, though they all share similar traits in how the abuse started, usually with words. Some survivors are further along in their recovery and from an outsider looking in, it was fascinating how different people have coped both during the abusive relationship and then after. 

Though the descriptions of what the survivors went through are difficult to read, it is heartwarming to see so many of them living happy and full lives, in healthy relationships and so many that are on their way to recovery and a good life doing what they want to make themselves happy and not someone else. 

This isn't an easy read, but it is an important one. Giving a voice to survivors makes the problem visible and it can help people who may be in a similar situation see that they are not alone and there can be a light at the end of the the tunnel. There is also advice given at the end of the book by Jennifer Gilmour who is a survivor herself, in case you may need it or know someone who does. 

About The Author


Born in the North East, Jennifer is a young, married mum with three children. In addition to being an author, she is an entrepreneur, running a family business from her home-base. Her blog posts have a large readership of other young mums in business.

From an early age, Jennifer has had a passion for writing and started gathering ideas and plot lines from her teenage years. A passionate advocate for women in abusive relationships, she has drawn on her personal experiences to write this first novel 'Isolation Junction’. It details the journey of a young woman from the despair of an emotionally abusive and unhappy marriage to develop the confidence to challenge and change her life and to love again.

Since the publication of her debut novel Jennifer has continued to be an advocate for those in abusive relationships through her blog posts, radio interviews and Twitter feed. Jennifer also gained a qualification in facilitating a recovery programme for those who have been in abusive relationships.

Jennifer continues to publicly support those who are isolated and struggle to have a voice. Jennifer hopes that ’Clipped Wings’ give’s a voice to survivor’s experiences and raise’s awareness further of the types of unacceptable behaviour which fall into the category of domestic abuse.

Don't Forget To Check Out The Rest Of The Tour





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