Thomas's Reviews > In the Dream House: A Memoir
In the Dream House: A Memoir
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Such a powerful memoir about a horrifying abusive relationship. In spare vignettes, Carmen Maria Machado documents the beginning, middle, and end of her relationship with an ex-girlfriend who threatened, humiliated, and tried to control her. I’m a sucker for short chapters and Machado writes them well here, describing the terror and confusion she felt at the hands of her ex-girlfriend with concise and exacting detail. With courageous honesty, she shares both the desire she felt for her ex-girlfriend at the beginning of their relationship and her want to feel wanted, as well as the gaslighting she experienced and the difficulty she encountered in seeing the truth of her relationship even when her ex hurt her. As someone who grew up with an emotionally abusive mother, I related viscerally to some of the sentiments Machado shares, like when she wishes that she had a bruise or a physical indication that her ex had abused her even though she knows that wishing for that is awful in its own way.
I appreciated Machado’s commentary on the minimization of abuse in queer relationships in relation to the overall lack of representation of queer relationships, especially lesbian relationships. Though I know relationships between two women and two men are in some ways incomparable, it made me think about how we often turn away from critically examining queer relationships just because we’re often grateful for the representation at all – like Call Me By Your Name , which includes its own emotionally unsatisfying/obsessive relationship (which I recognize is different from the relationship Machado describes in this memoir), or the oftentimes toxic relationship between Brian and Justin in Queer as Folk. Machado does a great job centering women’s romantic relationships with one another in In the Dream House without glorifying or fetishizing them.
At times I felt pulled out of the narrative when Machado included some of the more experimental chapters, the ones that strayed from describing her relationship with her ex-girlfriend and her own life. At the same time I recognize that these chapters could have served to represent how the mind often deals with trauma, through taking oneself out of the event and dissociating into alternative narratives. I think a part of me wanted a little more from this memoir – such as her healing process after the relationship aside from her developing a romantic relationship with Val – though I totally respect Machado’s decision to include whatever she wanted to and did not want to in this memoir. Recommended for fans of memoir and queer books and books about relationships.
I appreciated Machado’s commentary on the minimization of abuse in queer relationships in relation to the overall lack of representation of queer relationships, especially lesbian relationships. Though I know relationships between two women and two men are in some ways incomparable, it made me think about how we often turn away from critically examining queer relationships just because we’re often grateful for the representation at all – like Call Me By Your Name , which includes its own emotionally unsatisfying/obsessive relationship (which I recognize is different from the relationship Machado describes in this memoir), or the oftentimes toxic relationship between Brian and Justin in Queer as Folk. Machado does a great job centering women’s romantic relationships with one another in In the Dream House without glorifying or fetishizing them.
At times I felt pulled out of the narrative when Machado included some of the more experimental chapters, the ones that strayed from describing her relationship with her ex-girlfriend and her own life. At the same time I recognize that these chapters could have served to represent how the mind often deals with trauma, through taking oneself out of the event and dissociating into alternative narratives. I think a part of me wanted a little more from this memoir – such as her healing process after the relationship aside from her developing a romantic relationship with Val – though I totally respect Machado’s decision to include whatever she wanted to and did not want to in this memoir. Recommended for fans of memoir and queer books and books about relationships.
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Reading Progress
October 31, 2019
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January 30, 2020
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February 1, 2020
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Terri
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Feb 04, 2020 08:47AM
Thomas...Wonderful review.
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Michael wrote: "Insightful review Thomas! Glad you also appreciated this one. I wished it had been a bit longer and focused on life after the relationship as well — her writing’s so strong, and it would’ve been in..."
Thanks Michael, for taking the time to read and to comment and for validating my desire for a bit more. Thank you too for all your book reviews and for reading social justice-oriented books so that we can follow and read them too. :)
Terri wrote: "Thomas...Wonderful review."
Thanks so much Terri!
Thanks Michael, for taking the time to read and to comment and for validating my desire for a bit more. Thank you too for all your book reviews and for reading social justice-oriented books so that we can follow and read them too. :)
Terri wrote: "Thomas...Wonderful review."
Thanks so much Terri!
Beautiful review Thomas wow! I also have to say that yes the minimization of abuse in queer relationships is drastic considering its incidents' are highly prevalent.
This quote really stood out for me, Thomas: 'it made me think about how we often turn away from critically examining queer relationships just because we’re often grateful for the representation at all'! YES, thank you and it's so so true!
I am not brave enough for this book considering I just got out of a relationship that was pretty wild, man. Thank you for sharing your vulnerability and how you related to this book it surely gave your review a lot of hefty weight.
Peace.
This quote really stood out for me, Thomas: 'it made me think about how we often turn away from critically examining queer relationships just because we’re often grateful for the representation at all'! YES, thank you and it's so so true!
I am not brave enough for this book considering I just got out of a relationship that was pretty wild, man. Thank you for sharing your vulnerability and how you related to this book it surely gave your review a lot of hefty weight.
Peace.
Chris wrote: "Beautiful review Thomas wow! I also have to say that yes the minimization of abuse in queer relationships is drastic considering its incidents' are highly prevalent.
This quote really stood out fo..."
Thank you so much for this kind and enthusiastic comment Chris! I'm glad themes from this review resonated with you and that you're taking the time you want/need to heal and process your relationship before reading this book. I appreciate you encouraging my vulnerability and hope you are doing well.
This quote really stood out fo..."
Thank you so much for this kind and enthusiastic comment Chris! I'm glad themes from this review resonated with you and that you're taking the time you want/need to heal and process your relationship before reading this book. I appreciate you encouraging my vulnerability and hope you are doing well.