A woman uncovers an unopened chest in her mother's attic in Stowe, Vermont. Inside lies a leather-bound book titled The Gift. Its contents propel her into an unsettling journey of self-discovery that threatens her understanding of identity and family.
Within the book are photographs of herself, each paired with a poem written for her, along with a DNA test voucher. The results challenge everything she has been told about her father, believed to have died years before.
The story traces her mother Sara's past in South Africa, from a strict religious upbringing in Prince Albert in the Klein Karoo to a forbidden relationship that ends in pregnancy and coercion. Forced to flee, Sara assumes a new identity in the remote Baviaanskloof, where she gives birth to Willow. Years of hardship follow before she finally secures their emigration to the United States.
Interwoven vignettes reveal the life of the man Willow comes to accept as her father, chronicling his own existential journey through Africa and Europe.
Driven by unanswered questions, Willow undertakes a hazardous return to South Africa, marked by false starts and near failures, in search of the truth.
Through Willow, Sara, and the father, The Gift explores personal freedom, responsibility, and choice as the foundations of self-discovery and meaning.