I was surprised to not have been as confused reading The Past Aheadas I had expected, and it is written in such an interesting way as it goes from one storyline to another. I think one of the most concise statements about Isaro’s upbringing is: “Even before she realized she’d drowned, they took her from the water and gave her dry clothes and a cup of hot chocolate” (Gatore 29). Much of this story, thus far (and from what I understand), has been about Isaro giving herself permission to grieve and then discovering the loss of which she is grieving. Isaro was given a new identity without ever knowing why she had to give up her identity of her earliest years of life. Of course, this led to her eventually coming to a breaking point while in university and she then embarks on a journey to reclaim her history. In light of the lack of clarity given to Isaro’s past by her adoptive parents, I think Gatore’s novel is revealing the importance of recognizing trauma and not merely ignoring it after the fact. The Past Ahead might be calling its readers to look at brokenness, empathize with brokenness, and then grow because, and through, the brokenness. Gatore’s work appears to suggest that while grief is a process, it is a necessary process. I wonder if the rest of the novel will reveal more about Isaro’s process of grief (and how Niko’s story plays a role in Isaro’s grief) or if it ends in hope or is open-ended.
I commented on Eliza and Hailey's posts.
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