An essential story for understanding what's at stake when women's rights are stripped away
Cait West was five years old the first time she was told her swimsuit was too revealing. By the time she turned eighteen, the rules in her home were ironclad: no college, no career, no choices of her own. As a stay-at-home daughter in the Christian patriarchy movement, she was trained for one purpose--to serve the man her father would eventually allow her to marry. She learned to cook, to clean, to disappear. She learned that her body was a threat and freedom was sin. Her life would never be her own.
Until she broke free.
While dystopian novels like The Handmaid's Tale explore the extremes of patriarchy as fiction, Rift tells a true story of gender oppression--one that many American women are experiencing now behind closed doors at home and at church. Weaving together her own gripping story with lyrical meditations on the geology of displacement and fracture, West maps the fault lines of her own breaking: the isolation that kept her silent, the forbidden relationship that became her escape route, and the complex aftermath of choosing herself over everything she'd been taught to believe. Heartbreaking, hopeful, and blazingly honest, Rift is both expos and invitation--a reminder that freedom and healing are possible for those determined to claim a different life for themselves.