Sofía is thirty-five and her husband has left her. Her father died the
year before, and her mother is living in the Canary Islands with a new
partner. Sofía flees the city with her young son, seeking refuge in her
father's house on the southern coast of Spain, where she spent summers
as a girl. Her younger sister, with whom she has a close but uneasy
relationship, joins her. Living together again, the sisters face their
present as well as their childhood and tangled past.
Wolfskin is an intimate meditation on ambivalence and motherhood,
eroticism and disappointment, family violence and failure, and
ultimately, the possibility--or impossibility--of living with those you
love.