What She Heard in a Room Without Sound

Pink Noise

In 1951, experimental composer John Cage entered an anechoic chamber at Harvard University. The room was small, with walls covered in foam pyramids, and designed to be totally silent. But when John Cage went inside he heard two tones: one high, one low. Afterwards he asked his guide what the tones were and he was told that one was the sound of his blood, the other the sound of his nervous system. 

No one stays in an anechoic chamber for long. It’s said that if you do you lose your shit. Complete silence can induce nausea, claustrophobia: it’s a loud and unwelcome look inward, for many, an inability to tolerate what echoes inside one’s own body.

A few years before my daughter is born, my ears begin to ring and won’t stop: a playable note twinned with the high-end whine of an old TV. At first, I can only find relief with my cheek pressed against the refrigerator. Its low electrical ohm-ing fills all the spaces so my tones become two stones in a solid wall, which is its own form of silence.  

A doctor warns me that the volume could rise in pregnancy, something about hormones, but instead the sounds, and the fear, both lessen. I’m a vessel now, an adaptable structure, a ship that, through some ancient, mystical process, can build itself as it sails across the ocean. 

In the first year of my daughter’s life the sound roars back, waxing and waning with my changing moods, quieting for days and then demanding attention, like a bone broken in childhood acting up when it rains. 

It is during this time that the quietest room in New York City arrives on the top floor of the Guggenheim Museum. It’s not an actual anechoic chamber, but a “semi-anechoic chamber.” Training wheels for insanity, I tell my partner. We buy tickets. 

We remove our shoes before entering. No phones allowed. We shed our possessions. We agree not to speak. We pass through a room between two heavy doors as if prepping in airlock before a space walk. 

Like John Cage, we have a guide, a delicate-looking man with wire-rimmed glasses. 

He tells us Doug Wheeler created this room, named it PSAD Synthetic Desert III. Wheeler first had the idea for it in the ‘60s, so long ago he can’t remember what PSAD stands for. Also, as far as anyone knows, there was never a I or a II. Wheeler learned to fly from his pilot parents, grew up in the Arizona mountains.

I wonder, listening, how it might’ve altered me to live in wild spaces, instead of the world’s first suburbs, then the world’s most examined city. Doug Wheeler thought to himself, after landing his prop plane on a dry lakebed in the Mojave, waiting for the “tink-tinking” of its engine to die down: “I’m hearing distance. I’m seeing distance.” 

We advance, five in total, to our final destination, our synthetic desert, our semi-anechoic home for the next fifteen minutes. We sit on a white platform surrounded on three sides by a forest of white fiberglass pyramids, seen from above. Maybe it’s the feeling of standing on the edge of something, but the view seems vast in this smallish room, the gray-lit peaks both spiky and soft. I could see someone saying they looked like rows of shark’s teeth, if that person were afraid. But I’m not afraid.

The five of us have nothing to fear: we will not lose our minds in the fiberglass forest because we’re being protected by pink noise, pumped in by Wheeler. 

The pink noise here is desert wind, but pink noise is also the pattern of hearts beating, the hush of far-off traffic, a fan’s oscillation, interstellar gases light years away, hissing as they approach a black hole.

A sound like the color inside a shell, an ear-shaped hollow for hot secrets, the color of everyone’s first home inside a mother. Am I getting to vaginas? Who isn’t, ever? It’s the only way out for so many of us, though not my daughter. My daughter was airlifted, rescued. Her pink noise heartbeat was losing its color. She had inched too close to the black hole. 

The most notable thing about the quiet room is that everything in it that is not itself sounds very, very loud. My own ears: deafening, five-alarm fire. Every pants-swish or footstep a record scratch that halts the whole world’s turning, makes you whip your head around to discern its source. We walk slowly, make small movements. We peer over the edge of the platform at the landscape of triangles: look up, look around. 

At some point everyone sinks to sitting. At some point, we all lie down. At some point, the guide takes off his glasses and it’s the loudest sound I’ve ever heard, like a million people tearing apart the sealed flaps of a million cardboard boxes. He curls himself into a fetal position and rests on the floor with the rest of us. He closes his eyes and I can hear my heart breaking: we are all so safe and vulnerable here, so brittle outside in the loud world. When my stomach rumbles a few minutes later, everyone feels the earthquake. 

I wonder if they sometimes return to this room in their minds, like I do. I wonder if they were hungry, too. 

8 Books About Living in Los Angeles

I’ve probably said it more times than Randy Newman: I love L.A. And to prove it, I pay homage to my city in my three novels, Esperanza’s Box of Saints, González & Daughter Trucking Co., and my latest, L.A. Weather, where I tell the story of a Mexican American Angeleno family making sense of their complicated relationships, crises and ordeals as drought and fires close in on them throughout a momentous year in Southern California.

L.A. Weather

But I’m not the only writer infatuated with the incomprehensible and fascinating sprawl that is Los Angeles. As Scott Timberg and Dana Gioia explain in The Misread City, we’ve had “the gumshoes, the wisecracking Englishmen, the Boosters, the Beats, and the boozers, after the despairing heroines of Joan Didion and the cocked-up rich kids of Bret Easton Ellis,” all attempting to give us their own version of L.A., however disastrous, devastating, uplifting or irreverent, but always so L.A.

When looking at this city, no writer should use a telescope. A kaleidoscope is a far better instrument, with its multifaceted prisms projecting endless configurations. In this selection of books, I offer you a few of those sparkles in the understanding that we’re not even getting started. 

Beverly Hills

Play It As It Lays by Joan Didion

A literary icon of the L.A. counterculture movement, Joan Didion portrays a devastating vision of 1970s Los Angeles in the story of Maria Wyeth Lang, an actress living in Beverly Hills, who suffers an emotional breakdown at a psychiatric ward. When asked by her doctor, she tells of her distressing and lonely life as a Hollywood socialite. Neglected by her film director husband, Carter, she spends her days driving around the city, attending pointless parties, using drugs, and engaging in risky and self-destructive behavior. After her husband forces her to have an abortion (the result of an affair), she divorces him. And to illustrate the notion that the rich also cry, she fantasizes in the psychiatric ward about reuniting with her institutionalized mentally ill daughter. This is the story of the self-inflicted collapse of a life. 

Topanga Canyon

Golden Days by Carolyn See

Carolyn See starts this social satire when her lead character, Edith, returns to Los Angeles with her two daughters after a less than positive life in New York—both personally and professionally—and settles in Topanga Canyon surrounding herself by a tribe of locals. Soon, her life makes a turn for the better, developing relationships with eccentric characters (a madcap guru, a television evangelist, you get the idea) that eventually launch her into success and paradise, until the nuclear war darkens her blissful life. But, unlike other gloom and doom apocalyptic novels, Carolyn See portrays a renewed and hopeful human race emerging from the scorched rubble—never mind the absence of the infamous “nuclear winter” and other related devastation—as a testament of L.A.’s perpetual optimism. 

Malibu

This Book Will Save Your Life by A. M. Homes

This Book Will Save Your Life by A.M. Homes

This is a novel of reinvention, of giving the world a chance and a place in your heart. Based in Los Angeles with its corresponding weather calamities and cultural idiosyncrasies, the story tells of how Richard Novak—a homebound securities trader—is launched out of his home office and personal treadmill into the outside world by happenstance. He discovers the wonders of being a community hero (composed of a cast of very L.A. characters like Anhil, a doughnut-shop owner) by solving crises (saves a horse from a huge sinkhole in front of his house). A.M. Homes is known for her extraordinary ability to write psychological and intense stories, social satire, and black comedy, and if you’re into this, you won’t be disappointed. 

Palmdale & Granada Hills

Your House Will Pay by Steph Cha

Your House Will Pay is Steph Cha’s powerful, haunting exploration of a decades-old crime and its far-reaching effects on two Los Angeles families—one Korean American, and one African American. This thriller follows Shawn Matthews, a black Angeleno who is still reeling from the murder of his sister by a Korean woman in the early 1990s, and Grace Park, who lives a quiet life with her immigrant parents until she discovers that her mother might be hiding a dark secret about her past. Inspired, in part, by true L.A. events, Your House Will Pay is a story of loss, injustice, trauma, and reckoning that captures the complicated history of two Los Angeles communities.

Mt. Hollywood in Griffith Park

Hollywood Notebook by Wendy C. Ortiz

Born in Los Angeles and with a profound connection to this city’s psyche, Wendy Ortiz delivers a map of the city transformed into words: a fragmented memoir of hurt, love, loss, and reinvention. What does a young writer (one of thousands) living in this city and trying to make it worry about? Joblessness. Rent. Bills. Riding the metro. Alcohol. And yes, sex and publishing too, of course. 

Venice

Lithium for Medea by Kate Braverman

Lithium for Medea by Kate Braverman

Kate Braverman lived in Los Angeles for years and set many of her stories in this city, like Frantic Transmissions To And From Los Angeles or Palm Latitudes. In Lithium for Medea, Braverman tells the sad and dark story of Rose and her dysfunctional family, a love-hate relationship with her mother, her dying father, and drugs, lots of them. It is a disturbing, cruel and irreverently poetic story. I survived her writing workshop in the early ’90s. Kate taught me the weight of words and I thank her for that. My copies of her books are yellow from the excessive use of my highlighter. If you enjoy reading poetic prose, Kate Braverman is the master to go to.


Calabasas

If You Lived Here You'd Be Famous by Now

If You Lived Here You’d Be Famous By Now by Via Bleidner

If You Lived Here You’d Be Famous By Now is a debut novel by Via Bleidner, a young writer who reports her experiences living in the L.A./San Fernando Valley enclave of Calabasas and attending Calabasas High School. Calabasas—for those who might not be in the pop cultural know—is home to the Kardashians. Bleidner writes about the world she has inhabited as a reporter. She participates, but she also is able to maintain a certain writer’s detachment describing the shenanigans the natives engage in: lip surgery, social media, and dog celebrities. But there is humor in this slice of the L.A. experience. Bleidner not only describes, but also tries to understand and reflect. 

Malibu

Malibu Rising by Taylor Jenkins Reid

Malibu Rising by Taylor Jenkins Reid

Malibu Rising is a novel that captures the glamour, the empty façades, and the excesses of a celebrity-oriented surfing family. Malibu is part of the L.A. scene: a mix of money, sport, beach culture, and make-believe in approximately equal parts. Jenkins Reid focuses on the events of a single day when four siblings, children of a famous crooner, are throwing the end of summer party that every partygoer wants to attend. Hundreds show up and the party catalyzes the individual and family tensions until excess turns into mayhem and disaster. The four siblings are surfers and one can gather that the waves and their consequences are a proxy for lives lived on the edge: on the edge of financial, existential and emotional disaster, when the beauty of catching the perfect wave can be followed by a tumble into the angry ocean. 

How Literary Gatekeepers Can Advocate For Black Trans Women

When the finalists for the 2021 Hurston/Wright Foundation Legacy Awards were announced, Deesha Philyaw was thrilled to learn that she’d been nominated in the Debut Fiction category. Her story collection, The Secret Lives of Church Ladies had been published to much acclaim in late 2020, netting her numerous awards and a place among the finalists for the 2020 National Book Award. Every award holds a unique meaning for Philyaw, but when she learned of her recognition by the Hurston/Wright Foundation, she felt a special wholeness. 

A woman in a white shirt and bow tie gazes out

“It felt so full circle,” she said. “I attended the Hurston/Wright Summer Writers Week in 2007. And it was transformational. I felt so much validation as a writer. I saw that as a turning point in my career.” Philyaw has never forgotten the impact of that week; it’s an experience that’s common to writers of color. In an industry that inundates us with whiteness, writers of color often thrive when we have the opportunity to learn from mentors who look like us, share our identities, and can avoid treating our literary point of view as something that needs to be explained or justified to a white readership. That type of literary marginalization isn’t limited to writers of color, though. 

Not long after Philyaw learned of her own nomination, Hurston/Wright released the names of the honorees of three special awards, all of which would be given to more seasoned writers for their overall body of work. This includes the North Star award, and its controversial honoree: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. 

For many years Adichie has been heralded as the face of contemporary Nigerian literature, a worthy successor to Chinua Achebe—though shrinking the contributions of Nigerian writers to merely these two does a disservice to the larger scope of African literature. In recent years, Adichie—much of whose fame is built on her staunch feminist values and progressive stances—has come under fire for a statement she made in a televised interview she did for Britain’s Channel 4 news: “When people talk about ‘Are trans women women?’ my feeling is that trans women are trans women.” What her critics (myself among them) bristle at is the unspoken implication that trans women are not, and can never be, simply women. 

Dear Senthuran by Akwaeke Emezi

As increasingly more visible feminists leaned into the ideology of Trans Exclusionary Radical Feminism (TERF), including JK Rowling, Adichie publicly stood with them and has since decried the advent of “cancel culture.” In a self-published essay titled “It Is Obscene: A True Reflection in Three Parts,” Adichie failed to confront her own history of transphobic rhetoric. Instead she shifted the focus to two former (unnamed) students of hers, believed to be the Nigerian writer and queer activist OluTimehin Adegbeye, and Akwaeke Emezi, who is non-binary and most recently the author of Dear Senthuran. Both writers have been critical of Adichie in recent years. In the essay, Adichie chastised them, claiming they publicly branded her as transphobic. Then she condemned cancel culture, writing, “I have spoken to young people who tell me they are terrified to tweet anything, that they read and reread their tweets because they fear they will be attacked by their own.” The essay was published earlier this year, during Pride month, and was so popular that for several hours, Adichie’s website crashed. 

When Philyaw, a cisgender woman, learned that Adichie was this years’ North Star honoree, she was disappointed in the choice. Her immediate reaction, however, was not to bemoan either Adichie or The Hurston/Wright Foundation. It was, instead, to consider the needs of Black trans women and writers. She quickly withdrew her name from contention for the Debut Fiction Award and, along with Kiese Laymon, donated $5,000 to Roots. Wounds. Words: a literary arts organization offering visionary programming for BIPOC writers at all intersections of identity with a particular emphasis on queer, trans, and gender-noncomforming writers. 

I spoke to Philyaw about the commitment to do no harm that comes with a public platform, the complicated conversation around trans identity in the Black community, and the cognitive dissonance I often feel as a Black woman of the trans experience in the publishing industry. 


Denne Michele Norris: Tell me about the moment when you learned who would be the honoree for the North Star Award. 

Deesha Philyaw: I gave a heavy Negro sigh. I was sad. It was hurtful, not to me directly, but to people in my life. There are people in my life, whom I love, who are trans—you included. There’s so much debate about trans people. And, you know, there are debates about Black people, too, and those debates degrade our humanity. I’ve always pushed back on that as a Black person, and so I read these debates about transness the same way. They’re painful to watch, and it’s hard to know what to do because pushing back feels like you’re part of the debate and making it more valid, but silence doesn’t feel right either. 

This is about how our communities show up, or don’t show up, for Black trans people.

I’m weary of engaging on social media because it never ends well. People get harmed, and it’s a total cluster. So with this situation, my next feeling, after sadness and hurt and disappointment, was to ask myself “What do I do? How do I not further harm?” That should be our first thought. Good intentions that cause inadvertent harm are still harmful. I almost felt like no matter what I did, it was inadequate because the nature of the problem is bigger than one person. This is about how our communities show up, or don’t show up, for Black trans people. In this case, I’m talking about the Black literary community. And so as a member of that community, I had to figure out how to take this moment and make it bigger than just the moment, just me, just that particular award and that recipient. I wanted to encourage other people to take this as an opportunity to think about what trans people need from us—cisgender folks who want to support the community. That’s what I hope people take away from this. What do trans women need from us? Are we doing enough? What can we do collectively, and individually? 

DMN: I don’t think we can escape the fact that certain aspects of this conversation are specific to the Black community. Transphobia is everywhere, but the conversation around transness within our community is, to some degree, uniquely ours because collectively, we know systematic marginalization, and we often look at other groups from that perspective, without recognizing intersectionality, or the validity of other marginalized identities. How have you moved beyond that?

DP: From a place of true ignorance; I grew up in the south and so much of what’s hurtful to the community is words. It’s all tied up in language. As a child, the language we had in the south for trans folks was dehumanizing. The irony is that so much of what I’ve learned has come from my own children. My kids have been really formative in helping me understand transness. Kids that they’ve been friends with since kindergarten are transitioning. I remember several years ago when we were chatting about one of my daughter’s friends who had transitioned in middle school. And I innocently—because, like white women, the rest of us want to claim innocence, too—asked about what I now know is their deadname. I wanted to remember it. When I tell you how my daughter lit me up! She said, “That is their deadname. You don’t need to remember it.” And I had to sit with that, and further educate myself. And I think when it comes to our community, sometimes there’s this idea of “I’m the adult here.” But I’m fortunate that my children, who I love more than anything, know more than I do. I’m happy about that because I don’t want them to be ignorant, I want them to be wiser. We see children using the pronouns that their friends ask them to use so effortlessly, and I think if we can’t do that, as adults, we should be ashamed of ourselves. And folks in our community make up so many excuses about misgendering people and using the right pronouns and the truth of it is that they don’t care enough to make the effort, or to admit when they are wrong about gender. People say it’s much ado about nothing, or they say we’re doing too much, or my favorite excuse is “the agenda.” But the fact is that many of us are not willing to do the work, to understand the harm that we’re doing, and to try and be better. 

DMN: Right! That’s exactly right! And you know, the first time Adichie emphatically stated that trans women are trans women, I was sort of willing to look past it because she seemed so progressive otherwise. I thought “she’s on her journey and she’ll get there in a year or two.” But what you’re saying has really calcified for me over the last few years as TERF rhetoric seems to have grown—and not just in regards to her, but in some ways about our larger industry. Many among us are more invested in protecting our image, our wealth, our success, the perception of us as leaders, than we are in striving not to do material harm and to make amends when we have harmed. And I regret this about the publishing industry because we pride ourselves on being thought leaders. We pride ourselves on being forward thinking, and working in an industry where new ideas flourish and we get to push the cultural conversation forward. This is how we talk about the publishing industry, how we position it in our society. And yet we haven’t moved far enough forward to cast debates about trans identity aside. I feel this enormous sense of cognitive dissonance because I’ve been heartily embraced as a Black woman of the trans experience who occupies an influential editorial position. And yet in the same professional sphere, so many of us are willing to look the other way when the most powerful in our industry, all of whom have zero lived experience as trans people, are allowed to speak with authority on who and what we are, and where we fit into gendered society. It is obscene. And for me, as a trans woman in publishing, it begs the question of what, really, is my place in this industry? Where is my glass ceiling? Because it has to exist, somewhere, if this is where we are as an industry.

If you remove the nonsense about cancel culture from the conversation, what are we left with? Power, gatekeeping, inequity, injustice.

DP: It’s another form of gatekeeping, but in this situation, the stakes are even higher. When I think about the virulence of the antagonism suffered by the two writers in that letter, it’s shocking. I watched how people, in the name of supporting Adichie, attacked those two writers. And this is about power, right? I can’t imagine having that kind of power, that kind of influence, and seeing people with far less power being attacked in my name, and looking the other way. But it becomes easy to not see people as people, and not see these power dynamics, and not see the potential for violence, especially when we decry cancel culture. Cancel culture has become the biggest smokescreen because it’s disingenuous. You wave that flag and suddenly the discourse changes. That’s part of why my statement on Twitter was so tight. I wanted to make sure we stayed focused on what this is really about which, again, is addressing the needs of trans women. If you remove the nonsense about cancel culture from the conversation, what are we left with? Power, gatekeeping, inequity, injustice. We’re left with these things, and these are hard things to grapple with. It’s so much easier to reduce the conversation to cancel culture. And my hope is that more people will start to interrogate themselves: What can I do? What more can I do? And Roots. Wounds. Words. is one organization we can support, but there are so many others. I came into this situation focused on what I can do, and I’ve come away from it realizing that I’m not doing enough. And so I’m constantly asking myself what else I need to do. 

DMN: Black trans women are often talked about as being the most vulnerable people in our society, systematically speaking. And in many ways, this is true. People kill us gleefully on a near daily basis. And the comfort that people feel with perpetuating violence against us is a direct result of rhetoric that devalues our lives. Every vulnerable, marginalized group deals with this, and yet when it comes to trans people, these attitudes are still treated as legitimate. Every time we are talked about by cisgender folks as an “issue,” rather than as human beings, we are stripped of our humanity. And that contributes to a dangerous climate for us. Something I think about often is when I was a scholar at Tin House in 2016, and Kiese was faculty that year. In his craft talk, he spoke about burning the house down and rebuilding it in an equitable way. It was about the publishing industry but it was also a metaphor for our entire society. And I feel as though what you two are doing is a part of this process. You both recognize your power and influence, and you’re turning that into action. It’s not difficult to read the letter Adichie wrote this summer, and then look at the violence in the Twitter mentions of the two writers that she tried to implicate. No one is talking about how that is also a result of her recognizing the power she has in this industry and willingly using it for harm.

DP: Exactly. So what did you use your power for? Toni Morrison said the whole point of having power is to empower someone else. So when we take a certain action, we have to consider who is empowered by it. So my hope is that the statement I put out empowers people to take a look at themselves, and really think through what actions they can take to support trans women of color. I hope more Black trans women will write, submit, and build literary careers. I hope individual trans women felt supported. Sometimes when I hear certain statements being made, statements that degrade people, I think to myself “you could’ve just said nothing.” But my hope is that just as you are reminded of how dangerous the world is for you when somebody makes a horrible statement, maybe seeing something supportive will help people feel, perhaps not safer, but less alone? None of it is adequate, and that’s why it has to be ongoing work. I’m hoping other people will pick it up and run with it. 

The story that Adichie is peddling—that trans women aren’t real women—isn’t new.

DMN: You’ve continually asked, even over the course of this conversation, what do Black trans women need? I think one of the biggest needs is simply volume. We should be the loudest voice in the room telling our stories, and naming and identifying ourselves as who we are. So what you’re helping with is growing opportunities for us to rewrite our own narrative. The story that Adichie is peddling—that trans women aren’t real women—isn’t new. But in elevating Black trans writers, you and Kiese are bringing our voices into the conversation. And it’s so rare that we have the opportunity to take our narrative into our own hands and shout it from the rooftops with real volume, real elevation. That’s a huge part of the work lies ahead. 

DP: I think the key is making sure that trans people are always in the room, and in any room that we occupy. For a while the conversation has been about making sure there are Black people in every room, but the buck doesn’t stop with us. We need to make sure Black trans people, in particular, have access to, and a place in, every possible room.

A Novel About Privilege and Class Set in Modern-Day Cairo

In Cairo Circles, Doma Mahmoud lures the reader on a voyeuristic tour of the Egyptian capital’s wildly differing class spheres. On the lowest circle is Zeina, the daughter of a housekeeper to an upper-class Egyptian family. Starting on a New Year’s Eve in the early 2000s, Mahmoud absorbs us with Zeina’s yearning soul and entitled voice. He follows up with Sheero, who comes from a mixed class background but is sufficiently middle class—through the efforts of his single mother—to be friends with Taymour, who is unambiguously upper crust though himself suffers from the neglect of his glamorous, drunk mother. 

Then there’s Amir, Sheero’s cousin who comes to America, ends up radicalized, and commits a tragic bombing that shadows Sheero’s existence in New York and in Cairo. Mahmoud doesn’t avert our gaze from the contradictions of family, religion, and secularity in his characters, and as it plays out in the country’s changing society. And ultimately, we have again Zeina, who is impossible to speak of without giving away the book’s plot—and its thrill—and who closes out the novel. I certainly raced to the end with a longing for Zeina, who delivers the final overlapping of the social circles.

I spoke to Doma Mahmoud, who lives in Cairo, about class nuances, Cairenes who might recognize themselves in the novel, and his favorite literary works about the city. 


J.R. Ramakrishnan: Where did this book start for you? How did you come to Zeina’s voice? Her voice is so incredibly compelling, as is her determination to be a singer. 

Doma Mahmoud: Growing up, I would sometimes be at a friend’s house and his full-time nanny would bring their child to work for the day. And I would watch this kid, that was my age, my height, my skin color, be endlessly curious about how they felt about the insane disparity of wealth and privilege at play, about the fact that part of their mother’s job was to pick up my spoiled friend’s candy wrappers from his bedroom floor. I carried this curiosity through my childhood and adolescence and decided to write this character to try and find answers, both from my own personal experience and imagination and from conversations I had over the years.

I would watch this kid be endlessly curious about the insane disparity of wealth and privilege, that part of their mother’s job was to pick up my spoiled friend’s candy wrappers.

Some people do not see their relative poverty as a burden, but others are deeply bothered and sometimes disturbed by it. At least half of the main characters in this book are like this. People who are restless to move up the ladder, or maintain their position on it, or just can’t stand the existence of such a ruthlessly segregative ladder in the first place.

The very first idea from which this entire book sprung was this: As a consequence of her mother’s job, working-class Zeina has to endure the sight of immense privilege and wealth every day, and for better or worse, she feels entitled to it. She is told by authorities on the matter that her singing could help her attain it, and so she becomes almost hysterical with desire. From the first day, I knew that the book would begin and end with Zeina.

JRR: “Fathers are the ruin of this country” is quite a line from Madame Alia! This seems to ring true in the case of Zeina, Amir, Mustafa, Omar, and perhaps Sheero too. I wonder if you could talk about this line in the context of your characters’ trajectories. 

DM: In the second half of the 20th century, free-market capitalism arrived in Egypt with a bang and consumed pretty much millions of men and a good share of the women. They worked so hard and built so much wealth and value, it’s impressive, but for a lot of them, even some of those that only managed to make ends meet, the first sacrifice made was time and closeness with their children.

At some point in my late adolescence, I thought of all the people I knew who struggled in their relationships with their fathers and was shocked to realize that it was a strong majority. And it adds up. When you stop to consider the long working hours, hyper-competitive work environments, and relentless forces of consumerism and classism that these men were subject to, it isn’t all that surprising that a lot of them became perpetually absent, or neglectful, or stressed, or angry, or exhausted, or violent, or all of the above. Maybe I’m being too forgiving, and they could’ve done a better job. Some did. The point is that it had serious effects on a lot of people from my generation. And it was impossible to tell the story of these six characters without exploring that aspect of their lives.

What’s ironic is that Madame Alia says that line but is doing a horrible job of being a parent herself. With the emergence of self-help and mental health awareness, we millennials are so good at describing all the ways our parents disappointed or negatively affected us; I hope that means we’re going to do a better job ourselves. I like to think we will, but my parents mock me when I tell them this, which scares me. “Sure,” they say. “Inshallah.” 

JRR: The violence is quite intense from Amir’s beatings (and everyone’s complicity), Amir’s own acts with Farida and then as a grown-up, to the more casual acts of aggression. Sheero reflects that beatings were “part of our culture,” but even he draws the line at what Amir experiences. Could you meditate a little on your thinking behind the seemingly circular nature of violence in the book? 

Religion and class have always been closely intertwined in Egypt and beyond.

DM: When I was growing up, it was pretty common for kids to be smacked by their parents when they misbehaved. Especially in the lower and middle classes. This might confuse some readers, but it is possible to be smacked as a child and not be emotionally disturbed because it feels controlled and safe. Sometimes, it can even be funny. But then here’s the problem: what can happen is that an adult will be smacking their child, and suddenly, it will go from controlled and non-threatening to malicious and scary. The parent will become possessed with anger or frustration or stress from work and will channel it into this physical violence they are inflicting on their kid. It’s a line that gets crossed abruptly and it’s difficult to define for anyone who hasn’t witnessed it. But what happens beyond it—that is the sort of true compulsive violence that can traumatize and get circular. Different personalities are affected differently. Some people are subject to violence as kids and go on to make sure they never lay a finger on anyone. In Amir’s case, the violence has seeped into his being and become a primary mode of interacting with others and reacting to the world.

JRR: I was intrigued by the ways in which class and religion intersect. In particular, Sheero being bothered that his mother has decided to wear a veil, and choosing to do so for the first time for the wedding of Tamara and Taymour. This line was striking: “But why? But is it necessary?” I am assuming none of the more upper class attendees would be veiled? Would you talk a little about how perhaps religion has entered into the middle and/or upper classes (in the ways, it perhaps would not have when these characters were younger at the start of the book in the early 2000s)?

DM: Religion and class have always been closely intertwined in Egypt and beyond. Most of the women at a middle-class wedding in Egypt today, or even as far back as the ’90s, would be veiled, whereas most at an upper-class wedding would not. That isn’t to say that one social class is more religious or devout than another, but the practice certainly looks different across different social classes. But as you mentioned, things have changed. There is a new class of self-made financially wealthy people who embrace the veil and wear it and who are in general a little more conservative. What will be interesting to see is how their practice of religion changes, if at all, over the next couple of generations, as their wealth multiplies and gets passed on.

JRR: How do you feel this book will be received in Egypt, perhaps by some of the Cairenes who might see themselves in your characters? 

DM: I think most of the people who recognize qualities of themselves or their friends/families in the characters will be happy to see their lives written about. At least that’s been the reaction thus far. Maybe some people will feel I did not paint an accurate picture, that I was too dramatic or negative, or even, on the other end of the spectrum, that I pulled too many punches. What I would say to that is that I couldn’t possibly paint an accurate or nuanced enough picture of an entire demographic or generation or class.

Ultimately, this is a book about six Cairenes born in the ’90s, two of whom move to the US for college and struggle to reconcile their Egyptian roots with American liberal culture, which is a specific experience. It’s also meant to be dramatic. I can only hope that readers enjoy the drama and feel touched by some of the scenes.

JRR: Your book offers a very evocative picture of Cairo (certainly the domestic intimacies of all the families involved). Would you share with us your favorite novels of Cairo? 

DM: Thank you! It almost goes without saying but Naguib Mahfouz’s Cairo Trilogy is the place to start. It’s 20th-century Cairo in a nutshell. Midaq Alley and The Thief and the Dogs are shorter but also great novels by Mahfouz for those who can’t delve into the trilogy. Essam Youssef’s A 1/4 Gram is a great novel centered around drug addiction in modern Cairo which has been translated to English. Nawal El Saadawi and Alaa El Aswany are literary giants whose work have also been translated. Woman at Point Zero and Yacoubian Building are the ones to check out first, respectively. Finally, everyone should look out for Noor Naga’s If an Egyptian Cannot Speak English, which will be published by Graywolf Press in April 2022.

7 Magical Realism Short Stories Haunted By Emotional Ghosts

I think a lot of us believe in ghosts. In fact, many of us are likely haunted by them. I’m talking about emotional ghosts, of course.  

My debut short story collection, Those Fantastic Lives: And Other Strange Stories, has a particular fascination with ghosts. In my stories, there are certainly the kind of transparent, traditional apparitions that float around, but there are also light-craving monsters and boy-aiding talking dolls that do their share of haunting. As physically present as these otherworldly spirits and beings might be, it’s the emotional ghosts surrounding them that serve as the true guides of my stories. My characters are people who need to escape the monsters in their pasts and, in some cases, their presents—people who need to transform so they can try again. For them, ghosts are everywhere. 

I began thinking about how emotional ghosts are oftentimes more frightening than physical ones and how it’s these kinds of internalized hauntings that shape the magical, weird stories I love so much. 

Here are seven stories that beautifully explore the deeply-felt emotional ghosts that plague so many of us: 

“The Alligator Theory” by Nathan Elias from The Reincarnations

A filmmaker loses his daughter in Elias’ “The Alligator Theory.” Cayman, the father, believes his daughter, Tina, isn’t really gone, however. Not for forever. He thinks she’s back but in the form of an alligator. Loss, acceptance, and reality work as a terribly cruel ghost in this devastating yet tender story.  

Book Cover

Rise” by Becky Hagenston from The Age of Discovery and Other Stories

Set in “the only artisan bakery in this north Mississippi town,” Hagenston’s “Rise” tells the story of a baker who begins having very bad luck. Things like a rabbit and a tooth start appearing in his bread. The objects are certainly troublesome, but the story is about what is causing them to appear—what exactly is haunting him and his shop. And why. 

Resurrection Hardware or, Lard & Promises” by Randall Kenan from If I Had Two Wings

This Kenan story from his final collection, If I Had Two Wings, is among his very best works of fiction. Here, we follow a character named Randall Kenan who returns to the author’s familiar setting of Tims Creek after purchasing a 200-year-old house, which he plans to renovate. However, there’s a problem. Ghosts begin appearing. As the story unfolds, we find our narrator is haunted by things bigger than ghosts. He must reckon with his home, his past, and his path going forward. 

Willful Creatures by Aimee Bender

The Leading Man” by Aimee Bender from Willful Creatures

In Aimee Bender’s “The Leading Man,” a young boy is born with keys as fingers. He can open all kinds of locks, including the one to his house. But, even if he does have key fingers, he can’t get access to the very thing he wants the most: the secrets of his father. It’s a haunting the boy struggles to shake. 

“The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World” by Gabriel Garcia Marquez from Leaf Storm and Other Stories

No magical realism list can be complete without an appearance from the father of the genre, Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Marquez’s “The Handsomest Drowned Man in the World” is full of emotional ghosts. When the body of a handsome, strong, tall man washes up on the shore of a small, isolated town, the community begins to wonder who the man could have been, giving him stories and a name. The man’s presence haunts them so much that they begin to transform their own lives and their community. 

On the Lonely Shore” by Silvia Moreno-Garcia from Uncanny 

Balthazar’s mother calls on Judith to care for her sick son at his seaside home in this magical, beautifully melancholic story from Silvia Moreno-Garcia. There are emotional hauntings aplenty here, and “On the Lonely Shore” explores how the feeling of impossible-to-escape loneliness is, perhaps, the most haunting ghost of all.

Winter 2014

Town of Birds” by Heather Monley from Kenyon Review

Set in a town where children begin transforming into birds, this affecting story from Heather Monley looks at what it’s like to not be like so many of the others around us—what it’s like to be an outsider and to want (and want and want) to fit in. The story is rich with vivid descriptions, but it’s the emotionally haunted young narrator that makes it soar.

Home Is a Trip You Can’t Ever Take Again

“These Golden Cities” by K David Wade

On the last night of my first spring break home from NYU, I dropped acid with my best friend, Dom. The week had largely been a bust: Grace wouldn’t get back with me; my mother was a ghost; and none of my niggas had changed. Still, the familiarity of walks to the gas station and old ladies calling my name and trees growing everywhere freely brought some comfort, some recollection of a home I’d once had, or would like to have had. The mixture of nostalgia and alienation made me feel—unrequited? And that feeling had been driving me crazy. I wanted to fuck all my exes and shake friends by the collar and get back on the bus a day early. Instead, I settled for LSD and a plan to watch the sun rise over the city, taking in the panorama—from projects to uptown—that pops up when you google Washington, Pennsylvania.


I’d done acid a couple times with the melting pot I fell into at college—a Russian, two Dominicans, a Pakistani, some Koreans—even a girl from Nigeria with an intense Boston accent. (Pretty different from Washington, where you were either Black, white, mixed, or ran a restaurant.) Dom had dropped acid before, too. He got super into psychedelics before abandoning his basketball scholarship at Slippery Rock and returning home. No one knew why he dropped out, but when he decided he was finished, that was it.

We headed to Dom’s house around sunset, after a long day of bullshitting, to pick up the tabs we paid his older brother Charles to get us from one of his white friends. I had white friends, too, but since college I stuck to the Black bodies in black hoodies I grew up with when I came home—I didn’t see enough of them on campus and when I did, they were usually serving me food. I tried Gentleman of Quality for a minute, NYU’s excuse for a Black frat, but those were the kind of dudes who taught themselves how to tie ties and discussed inclusivity. At college, I found myself quite lonesome.

Dom still lived on Houston Street, a potholed gray lick between the Advanced Auto parking lot and Catfish Creek, right where I’d left it. His mom was already at work, night shift at the mental hospital, and Eric—Dom’s younger brother and my other best friend—was out watching his kid because his baby mom had work. The house, which was eerily empty and dark, seemed to drink the dusk as we crept inside; even the family dogs, Rambo and Gunshot, did not rise to greet us. 

“You hungry?” Dom asked, leading me through the narrow hallway and into the kitchen. Tile tore like Velcro beneath his feet.

“I’m good,” I said. 

He poured a bowl of cereal, but only a small puddle remained at the base of the milk jug. Dom cursed, adding a bit of water from the faucet.

“Eric and Charles move back in, and don’t pay a goddamn cent in rent,” he said, mouth full of Reese’s Puffs. “But ole Dom been home ten minutes and there ain’t milk unless I buy it.” He shook his head. “Fucking fucks.”

He’d had his own apartment for a while, thanks to earning a decent wage down at the hardware store. Then the building that housed the shop got condemned and poof! Dom was back in his old room with Charles, who would never leave, while Eric slept across the hall in what could rightly be called a closet.

“Don’t bring that into the trip,” I said.

“I know,” Dom said. Then, “Don’t you start with me, too.”


We made our way upstairs, to Dom’s bedroom. Charles sat on a mattress on the floor, rolling a blunt and listening to Jadakiss’s “By Your Side.” It was my first time seeing Charles since being back. He looked skinny. He had gone to college, too, when I was still in elementary school. Dropped out halfway through and knew about all kinds of drugs.

“Here you go,” Charles said.

He handed us each a tiny square of white paper, thick as those perforated strips that seal mailed checks. We sat down on Dom’s bed and placed the tabs on our tongues straight away. They were flavorless. Mine dissolved into wet, soft bits I eventually swallowed.

We smoked with Charles to help the trip settle—it was like waiting for a game to load, pale ellipses flashing across a blank screen then disappearing, flashing again. Char could be stingy when the mood took him, or deeply generous. When I left Washington for New York the year before, he handed me a whole ounce of kill and said, “Good luck.” 

The room had white stucco walls so rough they could make you bleed, dingy beige carpet, and plastic bins full of clothes in place of a dresser. Some posters had been replaced, but Nas and Spiderman remained on either side of Aaliyah (Dom still joked about jerking off to her). A tall shelf housed all types of oddities: an ashtray shaped like a naked woman; a magic eight-ball that told dirty jokes; stacks of fantasy novels, including my copy of Goblet of Fire that I never got back and now had a torn corner; a few knives; a deck of playing cards; and an old Ironman action figure that had also once belonged to me, before I traded it to Dom for his Captain America.

These were the kinds of kids we used to be. As we grew older, however, we kept all that soft shit to ourselves.

Charles, Dom and I watched Year One on Dom’s tiny TV. In the movie, God chooses Jack Black, who plays a fur-clad caveman, to bear witness to the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah—which to me made total sense. Artist as prophet, you know? Time stretched thin across film. Jazz, baby, but for keeps.

I was tripping.

Instinctively, I turned to Dom. He grinned.

“Yep,” he said.

The first time I dropped acid, our whole gang of degenerates entered this hive, a sort of corporate mentality marked by synaptic suggestibility that made each of us agreeable to the simplest ideas. You want to smoke a cigarette? Sure! Want to listen to music? You bet! The second time, by myself, I tried my hand at a graphic rendition of Prometheus Bound which, upon discovering the next afternoon, I deleted, emptying my trash to obliterate any evidence it had existed. As the trip set in this time, however, I felt coolly subdued, like the universe owed me a favor and might finally pay. My phone read 9:52pm, which meant I’d just be coming down in time to catch the sunrise sober, or mostly so. Perfect.

“Let’s go get something to drink,” I said.

I waved goodbye to Jack Black, laughing at myself on my way out the door.


One night first semester, after a long call with Grace, I climbed the Empire State Building with my new friend, Gupta. He was a film student I’d met at this warehouse party and he needed a body for his black-and-white. He wanted me to walk through some alleys he’d passed where smoke billowed up through the sewage grates. Said he had this image of me in a black jacket, obscured by a plume, stuck in his head since the moment he read the assignment.

“Sewer smoke?” I said. “That’s some 9/11 shit.”

“Nah, bruv.” He fancied himself the next James Dean, but Bengali. “It’s ventilation shit. For the metro.”

We were somewhere near 29th and 5th, the Times Square neons just out of sight. I must admit I felt cool. I had arrived in this city on an art scholarship for my paintings, had dabbled in writing, but being on the front side of a camera was one of those quiet dreams I carried around like all vain creatures. Whatever. Gupta got good shots. And the smoke wasn’t the kind that made you cough, so no cancer. When I came out on the other side of the cloud, I saw the Empire State Building, one big fuck you to whoever knocked down Babel. I didn’t know it changed colors every now and then. Tonight, it burned opium blue.

“Want to go up?” Gupta asked.

“They let you do that?”

He smiled.

“Till the bars close.”

The lobby occupied its own plane: an empty, golden heaven. Blocky murals lined the corridor and ceiling, all gleaming, burnished by unseen hands. One in particular, a radiant image of the Empire State building itself, reminded me of this film Metropolis—both for the art deco influence and the pure decadence of having an image of yourself inside yourself. I stared at the mural a long time, the saint’s circle of sunrays crowning the tower all pointing up, up.

Eventually, we floated to the 86th floor and made our way out to the open-air observatory, where we were barred from suicide by thin steel crossbeams, yet remained unprotected from the savaging wind. The city looked like the inside of an infinite computer at this angle, an unending circuit board, each light connected to the next in some distinct but unseen way. This was before Grace found out I had cheated, but I knew then what our end would be. The distance in her voice during our call that evening told us both that she knew, too. I took a picture of the skyline and sent it to her. 

“It’s mad,” Gupta said. The wind bullied his thick mop into a quaff. “You never really know a city till you see it like this.”

I spent the next several weeks trying to recreate the image with colors, only to discard a stipend’s worth of knockoff Basquiats at the end of term. 


Back home, night settled thick, a pale gray sky full of shadows. As Dom and I made our way to the Unimart, an erratic bat stumbled drunk overhead. A homeless man watched us from an upturned bucket of paint; he coddled a silver-furred rabbit whose sleek coat made its handler appear the perfect gentleman, if a mangy one. I stared hard. They refused to disappear.

I texted Grace. It was important that I watched the sunrise with her for some reason. Tonight, I decided, she’d either forgive or condemn me for good. All I hoped was that she’d look me in the eyes while she did it. I needed to see for myself what she meant.

“Anyway,” Dom said, as we entered the store. I hadn’t realized he’d been talking. “My teeth are glowing.” 

The linoleum did not ripple, and the lights did not swallow us whole. In fact, the store seemed extremely orderly, as if all the shelves had been recently stocked, all the coolers replenished. I did have a warm, cozy feeling in my chest, but my mental faculties were crisp.

“You figure out if y’all are coming?” I asked, settling on a pint of peach tea.

“Yeah,” Dom said. “Can’t.”

My first big art show was in April and I had invited Dom and Eric to New York on a whim. I knew money would be tight, what with Eric’s newborn and Dom saving up for a new place, but I figured one weekend would be good for all of us. We had slowly started to drift since I left for school, started to settle differently, like dust on opposite ends of the same windowsill. I figured them seeing some of the world that I saw might reconnect us. 

Dom grabbed a small bottle of chocolate milk. On the label, a cow chewed her cud before daybreak—like, literally chewed. Beyond her, the sun hung low in unerring, eternal dawn.

“Sorry,” Dom said, finally. “Next time.”


Walking back to Dom’s house, I got a text about a party. But before I could ask if he wanted to go, a dark green Chrysler caught us in its headlights. I didn’t recognize the vehicle. They inched forward, flashing their high beams, and my chest went hot with the fear that precedes a fight. If you’re regular high and some shit goes down, you snap back to reality quick, willing and able. I didn’t know the protocol for hallucinogens. Could I even make a fist? 

The car cut a sharp turn and pulled up beside us. My body froze, then erupted with praise.

“Bug?” I said, laughing.

Bug leaned out the window, a bleach white grin cut through the tar of his round face. On his head: a feathery auburn wig that you might find on a Supercuts’ manikin.

“Why you wearing a wig?” I asked.

“Warrants,” he said. “Want to ride?”

The city looked like the inside of an infinite computer at this angle, an unending circuit board, each light connected to the next in some distinct but unseen way.

Bug and I went way back, to when we all used to rap in his cousin’s bedroom and record diss tracks on pirated versions of Cool Edit Pro we got off LimeWire. He’d been in and out of placement all growing up. From what I could tell, he was just trying to live his best life until he got that first big boy sentence to land him upstate for too long to count. Yet for a kid who sold heroin while everyone else was still stuck on crack, he was incredibly lighthearted. The kind of crook who would compliment your shoes before he took them.

We went on a smoke ride through the swollen hills and woody backroads that connect all those small towns outside Pittsburgh. Dom and I sat in the back, this white girl named Lily up front. Her and Bug went off and on since grade school, and she ran in the same circles as Grace. Her hair smelled like hairspray. Someone had scratched the word gypsy across the back of her neck in black ink.

“You still be rapping?” Bug asked, passing the blunt over his shoulder to Dom.

“Sometimes,” I said.

“That’s what’s up. I bet them New York niggas think you sound country.”

“Nah, but like, when you say yes ma’am to a lady at the grocery store, she’ll ask if you served in the Army.”

“Nuh-uh,” Bug said, eyebrows arching.

“Yeah. And instead of saying, that’s what’s up, they say, word.

“What they call thirsty?” Bug asked.

“Thirsty? They just say thirsty,” I said.

Bug snorted, nodded his head all solemn.

“Word.”

We got quiet for a while, the syncopated rhyme scheme of “Juicy” carrying us till it didn’t. Out the window, the trees would cut away all of a sudden for a rolling farm or some ancient, antebellum house, then reappear for miles and miles. 

“You seen Grace?” I asked.

Lily’s eyes avoided me in the passenger side mirror.

“I don’t even know,” she said. Then she clutched the grab handle above her door and shouted: “Don’t!”

The car lurched to a sudden halt near the top of a hill and Bug jumped out, some sort of thick black pipe in his hand. He cut a brief, hulking figure in the headlights, a gorilla in drag, then disappeared down the hill. A second later came one big boom, then another.

“Every fucking time,” Dom said. 

Bug reemerged, wig askew. The pipe that he held was a sawn-off shotgun. He looked disappointed.

“Deer,” he said. He climbed back into the car, which groaned beneath his weight. “I been trying to get one.”

Bug dropped us off at the party. Eric would be here soon. Grace had yet to respond. 

The house sat half an acre back from the road, a Wolfsdale mansion my friend Matty’s dad had built with his bare hands over the course of a decade. Cars lined the driveway, which stretched like a dog’s black tongue from road to garage. “Black and Yellow” emptied the speakers and filled the sky, but no neighbors lived near enough to complain. A golden glow emanated from the garage windows, which somehow transported me to the Empire State Building. Radiance was the word. Aurora, Zora, Dawn.

I leave tomorrow, I texted Grace right then. I fucking leave.

I had been accepted to study abroad at NYU’s Florence campus and for some reason the trip felt final. I had no plans to ever come back—at least, not to Washington. I didn’t know if I would ever see Grace again.

Inside, we found a bunch of white kids playing beer pong and talking loudly in tight circles. A few worn couches sat against the wall, liquor bottles lined the workbench, and the stench of old oil stung the air. I began to sweat.

These were all the kids to whom I once sold weed, from schools with only a handful of Black bodies among them. Sometimes we got their girls—the quiet nasty ones—but more often than not we were accoutrements, accidents. A friend of a friend. I wouldn’t say they were racist—at least, most weren’t. They just didn’t know how to explain us. 

Matty shimmied his way through the tightly packed bodies and hugged me. He smelled like Pac Sun.

“You want a drink?” he said. “Come drink.”

I followed Matty into the kitchen. He pulled me a Yuengling from the fridge, knocked the top off on the edge of the butcherblock island. The windmill blades of the ceiling fan made me dizzy. It was midnight.

“I saw that little movie you made with the Indian dude,” Matty said. “That shit was dope.”

After the silent film, me, Gupta, and the Nigerian girl from Boston, Ifedi, teamed up for a forty-eight-hour short film competition in which you had two days to create art from a handful of nouns drawn out of a mason jar. We got tiger, shoestring, and baseball bat. I designed, Gupta directed, and Ifedi, who changed her voice like magic when the lights went on, was our leading lady. The whole affair had some real Wes Anderson vibes. We won second place.

“A paper tiger,” Matty said, smiling. “Who the fuck would keep that on a leash?”

After a while Matty disappeared, off to another conversation no one would remember. I wandered around the house in search of a bathroom.

 “Oh, shit,” I said, upon opening a door down the end of the hall. This girl Megan, whom I once loved but had never fucked, was bent over the sink snorting a line. 

“What are you doing here?” she asked. “I thought you were, like, in Hollywood.”

“New York,” I said. 

“Oh.” She stared at me for a moment, as if deciding. She shrugged. “Close the door.”

Getting your dick sucked on acid is unreal. I came colors. Afterwards, however, a different kind of energy took over. A sad, squishy one that made me miss Grace. I wanted nothing more than to get out of the room, out of the house, into fresh air. I’d had a bad moment during one of my trips at school, where I thought too hard about Ma’s boyfriend and he transformed into King Kong and started eating everybody I loved—joints cracking between his teeth, marrow dribbling down his chin—until Ifedi, who was babysitting us, took my cheeks in her hands and said, “Just imagine a big stuffed monkey. Nobody should be scared of a beanie baby.” But Ifedi was not here with her soft palms and precious gap and I was starting to panic.

I left Megan to clean herself up and stumbled outside through the wobbling back door, so I didn’t have to see anybody. A porchlight came on and gave life to a family of moths. I pitched the rest of my beer, which I should never have drank, over the wooden bannister. The trees were dancing, attempting to seduce me, but I knew if I obeyed them, I would surely die. The sky began to arc and streak like a star-trail photo.

I took one deep breath, then another. I would never get Grace back. I wasn’t sure I even wanted to. There was something unexplainable inside of me, something tremendous, yet I knew it wasn’t far from Bug chasing that deer. I looked down at my hands, found them empty.

My eyes fluttered open at the soft slap of headlights. Dom’s truck pulled into the driveway, where I leaned against someone’s car with half a burned-out cigarette in my mouth. Eric stepped out, smile white as bones in the darkness, and said, “Bro.”


In New York, I read Kafka and discussed communism with bisexuals who wore gloves with cutout fingers. I drank espresso for the first time, smoked hookah, and tried sushi. I also called Grace some nights when I got drunk.

Usually, she wouldn’t answer. I’d leave voicemails, sometimes two or three. When I checked my phone in the morning, I’d text her, apologizing profusely, then take a hit from the Gatorade bong I kept bedside to calm my nerves. She understood: I was lonely, in an unfamiliar place, and needed some semblance of home. She knew this intuitively, even before I did. Said she forgave me. The first time I tripped acid, however, things changed.

We had all dropped tabs and sloshed around Gupta’s dorm like a roiling sea of youth, eating pizza in closets, blaring Arcade Fire, and hiding ourselves from ourselves. As the night dwindled, I wandered, wound up on the Red Steps beneath the neons, a few rows down from a bum belting showtunes and a few rows up from two dudes making out. Friends texted but I ignored them, too absorbed in the flashes and peals all around me, the promise of connection to everyone at once. I thought, in my stupor, that I could tap into all that energy, become one with it and thereby extend myself to Grace in such a way as to make her feel warm, like in the beginning.

I sat there a long time before I called her, the billboard directly above me a giant Coke can spinning slowly, slowly. That night, she answered.

“Grace,” I had said. “I figured it out.”

“What?” she responded, voice thick with sleep.

“All this! These golden cities! They mean nothing!”

“Michael,” she said.

I imagine she propped herself up on an elbow, rubbing rheum from her eyes. I imagined the molecules of her, perfect circles expanding and contrasting with each heartbeat, sparse then dense, dense then sparse. 

“Michael. This needs to stop.”


Dom, Eric and I left the party a little after two. My trip was in full swing. One moment, I’d be totally chill, and the next, my thoughts unspooled themselves like a silk origami girih. (What does a city with no sun actually look like? Was the invention of gears an inevitable transmutation of the immaterial human mind expressed in physical metaphor? Who the fuck framed Roger Rabbit?) Eric was cool, though. He kept the trunk rattling and laughed at me and Dom’s alternating nonsense.

“White boy shit,” he said. “I told y’all: weed and liquor. Cocaine, if the bitch is lucky.”

We pulled into the McDonald’s drive thru on Jefferson, the only 24/7 game in town. Semis barreled down the overhead bridge across the way, whose pillars gleamed graffiti in the streetlights. We’d had our phase of that, too, but not like the skateboarders. Mostly we just tagged the empty lot we used to drink in behind the power plant.

“Welcome to McDonald’s,” a girl’s voice said over the static. “What can I get you?”

“A double Mc-Dick with two big Black balls,” Eric said, pronouncing that last word more like crying.

“The fuck?” the voice said. Then: “Eric?”

“Who else,” he said, laughing. 

I climbed atop a rock and faced the sky, unleashing my most doleful cry.

Giddily, we ordered more food than we could eat. Eric ensured the girl threw in a bagful of extra fries. He spent so long macking at the window that the car behind us beeped. We all flipped them the bird and cursed out the window, but we rarely got too rowdy when we were at fault.

“I’m a slide through when you get off,” Eric said.

The girl smiled, caramel cheeks tinting rose.

“Okay,” she said. “Now get out my line before these people make me cuss them out.”

We were just going to sit in the parking lot and destroy our food, but something about us three being all together and the silver moon and the sudden wild west wind so out of place in the spring made me billow, made a sail of me, and I just knew what we needed to do.

“Let’s go to the power plant,” I said. 

“Yeah,” Dom said. “Let’s do that.”


The power plant was sacred. Home to laughs, fights, fucks, and everything in between: we grew up there. Or rather, we did grown-up things there as boys that shaped the kinds of men we’d become. Four green electrical towers overshadowed the trees behind Dom and Eric’s old house, connected by sagging wires and spaceship antennae. Left of the towers stood a few small generators and turbines, growing from the gravel like stout metal potatoes. To the right, a perfectly cubical redbrick building with boarded windows and one door that I’d never seen anyone enter or exit. To us, it was holier than Kaaba.

We staggered through the narrow footpath between the trees and the barbed-wire fence to the small fallow lot behind the building, mud squishing beneath our boots and jaggers sticking to the hems of our pants. You could see Dom and Eric’s old house over your shoulder, until you rounded the bend. Then it was just the old sitting stones, left there like Stonehenge, and a low-hanging moon above the towers. 

I bought two spicy McChickens but ate only the fries, each granule of salt sliding itself across my tongue, down my throat. Eric sat smoking a cigarette, a Steel Reserve in his hand. Dom, having devoured his meal, lay flat on his back on the largest rock, staring up at the sky.

They looked alike, the Barnes brothers, with their father’s receding hairline and their mother’s strong chin. Only Eric was meatier and closer to my height, while Dom was tall and skinny. It was something to watch Dom play basketball, back in the day. Read the court like a book. Sure, Slippery Rock was Division II, but he had made it out this place despite un-great grades and a severe case of dysgraphia. Nobody understood why he left college after one year, especially when Charles had told him, in a rare moment of older brothering, that dropping out was his only regret. No one except me.

The summer before junior year. Ma and her latest man were at their worst and so were me and Eric, robbing whoever we found behind the Unimart and selling a pound or two of weed each week. Dom had returned from college different, eyes that carried a brightness through boyhood calcified at last. He often disappeared in the midst of a party, took solo trips to West Virginia or Pittsburgh chasing girls we’d never met. When he was around, he looked sad—in a day-drinker sort of way. I knew he’d broke up with his girlfriend, some white girl he met up there, but nigga smile.

Dom had always been less prone to violence than Eric, who popped off at the sound of a breath, but in the fights we got into that summer he went haywire, scraping dudes’ faces off concrete and ripping out teeth. One time, outside this house party gone wrong, he tried to run somebody over with his truck.

It was that night, long after everyone else went to bed or found lovers, that he told me. Why he had been breaking everything that could break without remorse: His girl got an abortion, and he had imagined being able to raise the child by himself.


I looked at Dom now, stretched out like a lemur in the shadow of the power plant, a silly little smile on his face, then up at the moon, which was always full, and got the sudden urge to howl. I climbed atop a rock and faced the sky, unleashing my most doleful cry. Silence followed, after the echo, so I tried it again. Dom joined me. Sat up as if out of a coffin and just yowled, yowled, yowled. I thought Eric would tell us both to shut the fuck up, that the cops might come, but he stood, too. His cry was the saddest of all.

When we were done, I was damn near stone sober. Out of breath. Throat raw. Dom pulled out the little journal that he kept to practice his writing and started scratching his awkward sigils. Eric sat next to me, clearly exhilarated, and lit another cigarette.

“You really gone to Italy?” he asked me.

“Yeah,” I said.

“If I was you, I wouldn’t never come back,” he said. “New York ain’t far enough. If I was you? I couldn’t get far enough away.”


5:00am. Eric had walked off to that McDonald’s girl’s house. Dom had gone through Char’s stuff while he slept and ingested another tab. I sat on their front porch, scrolling through old photos of me and Grace. 

She was a beautiful girl. Honey butter skin, eyes like brown sugar. In every picture we took, I held her. She leaned against me as if I was some sound, sturdy structure, her curls tightly bound or overflowing, her smile in turns childish and unsure. Of all the girls since—and during—no one fit into my arms quite like her. And I had felt then that to fit properly into my arms was the only way to know me.

“What you doing?” Dom asked.

He sat on the bench beside me, a box of cereal in his hands.

“Being sad,” I said.

“I don’t want to be sad,” Dom said.

“Me either.”

We sat there for a moment, staring out at the empty street. 

“Do you remember everything we used to do here?” Dom asked. “Like when you married that fat girl with a rubber band ring? Or the time the cops set them two German shepherds loose on Rome over a handful of dime-bags? Do you remember how long it took for the smell of burning rubber to go away after the tire factory burnt down? Ain’t that shit take ages?”

I stood, tucked my phone in my pocket. “I’m gone go see Grace.”

“Mike-Mike,” he said, and we were boys again, children. “You ain’t the only one who gets sad.”


I never had a trip hold me longer than eight hours, and it had been nine or so since we dropped. I felt residue—certain trees looked the way an old song sounds in the back of your head, and the stars didn’t twinkle, they whorled—but walking through my city by myself, wearing a black hoody, fingertips brushing old bollards and bushes and buildings, I felt a certain freedom wash over me. A pure breeze. A staying presence. 

That which we call home is simply that. It may change, as we all change, and may never even be named, yet it remains inescapably familiar. And in that recognition lies the hope that a piece of you is unchanged, too.

I arrived at Grace’s house unscathed. She lived, like almost everyone, in a cut between the road and some trees. I threw a pebble at her window, then another, until she answered. She appeared, long hair draped to one side, eyes more awake than asleep. I gathered every mote of softness I could find and said, “Want to watch the sunrise?”

Grace stared at me. A long time. Then she let out a breath I had not heard her hold.

“Wait there,” she said.

A couple minutes later she tiptoed down the rickety wooden steps of her second-floor apartment. She came around the corner in my old football hoody and sweatpants, hands stuffed in her pockets against the predawn chill.

“From the train tracks?” she asked.

“No,” I said, “but we can take them there.”


The soft wood of the ties bent beneath my feet, as old things do, and I eventually took to walking only on the gravel scattered between them. Grace walked along the rail, as she always did, with the ease of a gymnast. We were only a mile out from the hill that held the view. 

We didn’t speak. Not with words, anyway. We brushed arms once, accidentally, and when our elbows touched again, I understood Grace was soothing me. My heartbeat boomed in the space between us. There was nothing really to say. She’d finish senior year and head off to college, somewhere far enough away to cut her hair and become someone new. I’d spend the semester in Italy, weekends in random European hostels, and then head back to New York, where some friends and I had just signed a lease on a Williamsburg loft. The next time we saw each other, Grace and I, we might not even notice. Only a feeling inside an airport, a vague second glance on passing trains.

 Or maybe there’d be more. Grab a drink, try again. That would be okay, too.

We made it to the top of the hill overlooking the city. We sat down on the cold, wet grass. I couldn’t see everything from here, but what I did see—the handful of buildings that made up our skyline; my old bus stop by the bakery; a radio mast like a giant candy cane in the distance—was enough, once it caught the sunlight. A painter’s purple first, then nipple pink, then flagrant red. 

I tried to map the scene onto New York, fit this entire city between the dingy side streets in Brooklyn. And Florence? How would the cracked cobble I once ran from cops on compare to stones preserved for centuries? How would words like terracotta and chiesa sound in my profane mouth? 

“You know what a gypsy is?” I asked Grace.

“Like Esmerelda?”

“No,” I said.

She frowned.

“You know, tomorrow, daylight savings time ends,” she said.

“So?”

“So, tomorrow, time speeds up. If you would’ve come then instead of now, my dad would’ve been awake, and he might’ve shot you. Or I could’ve fallen asleep, when they take that hour.”

“Who?” I asked.

“Whoever takes anything,” she said. She nodded to a stream of birds painting a black mass against the burgeoning sun. “Them.”

Eventually, the birds disappeared in the distance. Grace glanced at her phone, said she should probably go.

This Filipino American Memoir Confronts Privilege, Sacrifice, and Colonialism’s Legacy

Like the complex Philippine history the book aims to depict, there is no single sentence that can sum up Albert Samaha’s Concepcion, especially when he renders that history through the lens of his own diasporic family, dating back to his ancestors’ first encounter with Europeans. Though nominally a memoir in the sense that it tracks Samaha’s life as a second-generation immigrant child in Northern California, his search for a stable identity as a teenage football player caught between cultures, his fraught relationship with his Trump-supporter mother as an adult, Concepcion uses these moments from the recent past to jump across centuries and explore the imperialist circumstances that brought them into being, a history that the United States continues to ignore because of its role as the Philippines’ former colonizer.

Concepcion by Albert Samaha

Samaha’s primary strategy for getting an American readership to face this history is to tell it through his own family members, which renders it both intimate and urgent. Writing about his great-aunt Caridad, an informant for the Americans during the Japanese occupations whose quick thinking prevented her death by sword, Samaha writes: “Her fate was one of countless breaks to swing our way, unearthing reminders that before a moment hardens into the past, it exists in a suspended fragility of the present.” Caridad was the first person from Samaha’s family to immigrate to the United States, and without her, neither Samaha nor Concepcion would exist in their current form.

Samaha and I spoke a week before Concepcion’s publication in a room at the Bowery Hotel overlooking the New York skyline. It was an appropriate location not only because a sizable portion of the hotel’s staff is Filipino, but because one of the book’s main questions is how to balance current prosperity against the sacrifices of previous generations, on familial, diasporic, and existential scales.

[Editor’s note: Meredith Talusan and Albert Samaha were briefly colleagues at BuzzFeed.]


Meredith Talusan: It really struck me reading the book how it’s simultaneously epic because it covers hundreds of years of history, but also generous in the sense that including your whole family in a memoir, which is usually thought of as an individual act of putting one’s perspective onto paper. Was that your vision from the beginning? How did it evolve?

Albert Samaha: The structure was the hardest part. But eventually, I came around to this idea that a central theme in the book is the way the past imposes itself upon the present, that we can’t escape the past, that we are still entrapped in its ripple effects. And so, to sort of jump back and forth in time, in sometimes vast distances of time, to me, offered an opportunity to show how true that is, and to show how that actually works. 

The other thing in my mind was I wanted the book to be a bit disorienting in time and space, because that’s the experience of being an immigrant, of coming into a new country. You come in and you have to figure it out. “Where am I? What’s the restaurant? Do I tip? Do I not tip? Where do I get a job?” All these little discomforts of being an immigrant, where I feel like people like me who is not an immigrant oftentimes will, I think, think of the challenge of immigration in kind of very macro terms, which is that you’ve got to learn the language and get a job and get a visa. But what I hear from many of my immigrant friends and immigrant relatives, the stories they tell, it’s always like the little things, like the first time my grandfather had stepped into an elevator, and what buttons to press, or the time that my mom first went to Paris and was struck that you could try out all the perfumes. They’ve got these little aspects of experience that stand out in their mind.

MT: You’re talking about how the past illuminates the present, but then I feel like also one of the effects is that it makes the past feel more like the present, right? 

I was wondering to what degree you were aware, or did you want to make what people perceive as history come alive? Especially, I think, in an American context where there’s a lot of denial and a lot of avoidance around specifically this history and specifically the ways in which America and the United States have behaved towards its major former colony.

AS: Totally. And I intend to apply that even broader in the sense that I think history, on its face, can feel inevitable, especially what we learn about in history books, where it’s like “Oh, of course, when you have a general as capable as George Washington and a legislative mind as brilliant as Thomas Jefferson, you’re going to create an exceptional nation such as America.” And that inevitability washes away the arbitrariness of history, and the fact that oftentimes the people who win win by chance just as much as by merit, like Cortez did not know that he was carrying on his boat the germs that would defeat his enemies.

And so, I think a theme I really wanted to unpack in the book is all those inflection points where things could have gone a different direction. And I think this was one of the central questions in the book where I asked if my mom’s sacrifice was worth it, if she should have come. But that begs the question: what other paths were there along the way that we might have missed?

I ultimately realized that the only way to get across the idea of how fragile the present is one hundred years ago is to make one hundred years ago feel present, and to try to bring the reader into that world as much as possible, and see the figures not as historical epic figures, not as like myths, but as human beings, whether that’s Magellan or Lapu Lapu or Rajah Humabon. 

MT: One of the other aspects of the book that really struck me is your engagement both at a historical and at a personal level with you and your family coming into an American culture that has this entire history, especially around white supremacy and Black slavery and anti-Black racism. How do you feel about the book in terms of intervention into this entire history while at the same time, we still live in an America that is so deeply oppressive to Black people? How do we as Filipino people situate ourselves within that racial paradigm?

AS: It’s an ongoing question for all of us immigrant diasporists who are newcomers to this centuries-old struggle for America’s soul that Black Americans and white supremacists have been waging. The reason colonialism works is because it makes the colonized aspire to assimilate to colonists, right? And I think to the colonized, it’s like, “We could either die or starve, or do what the colonizers say.” And over time, it creates the colonial mentality, which many brilliant minds have written about in many different ways.

But when we think of colonial mentality, I think the term E.J.R. David has used is internalized oppression. The way that my mom didn’t teach me how to speak Tagalog, and the way we revere white culture, and want to assimilate white culture, want to talk like white people and dress like white people, all that, have the same jobs as white people. I think what that often leaves out is what that means to side with them, with white people. What it means is to side with the people who have oppressed Black people and Indigenous people and a lot of other people. And I think we only think about it as how we’re internally oppressing ourselves, and not often enough about how we’re actually externally oppressing others by helping to uphold the imperial caste system that has kept Black people at the bottom and many other Brown people close to the bottom for many years.

What other paths were there along the way that we might have missed?

So what I hope to accomplish in the book is to reframe what it means to be colonized in a way. And I’m still grappling with it myself, you know? What are our responsibilities as Americans? I feel like the idea of asking about what you can do for your country is often framed from the right-wing perspective, where it’s almost this idea of “What can we do for our country?” is a taboo question, rightfully so in some ways because, no, we don’t owe anything to the country, right? It’s a country, and we are people who live here, and it’s not some loved one that we need to bestow any sort of reverence upon. It is a government institution. We owe it nothing. It owes us fair recompense for the taxes we pay. It is a transactional relationship, so let’s not try to make it bigger than that.

But I kind of want to rephrase the question of “What do we owe to the country?” in a different way. It’s not like “What do we owe to the U.S. government?” What do we owe to Black people? They are the reason that you and I have voting rights in America, because however Black folks are treated in America historically has been the bare minimum for how every other non-white group would be treated. None of us get treated as poorly as Black Americans, from a self-interested perspective even. Forget the morals of it. From a self-interested perspective, the worse Black Americans are treated, the worse that Filipino Americans can be treated. Ideally, everyone gets treated well, right?

So, for me, it was about honoring what it means to come to this country and to honor the country’s history. It’s not about, say, the Pledge of Allegiance. It’s not about knowing about Paul Revere’s Ride and George Washington’s cherry tree and about who signed the Declaration of Independence. It’s about looking at the history about who were the people whose blood and toil built the country? Who were the people who have suffered in order to push the country towards democracy?

MT: It’s fascinating how we’re talking about this in broad geopolitical terms, but the book coalesces this difference in perspective in terms of the relationship between you and your mom, who is a Trump supporter and believes in right-wing conspiracies, etc. Do you think of the book as a sort of template for figuring all of that stuff out?

AS: The first chapter of the book where my mom was getting scammed, I wrote that as it was happening. This book was an ongoing process. I was living it as I was writing it. One of the narrative arcs of the story is my own personal journey of understanding.

One of the quotes I have, the epigraph, was Maya Angelou who said, “Without willing it, I had gone from being ignorant of being ignorant to being aware of being aware. And the worst part of my awareness was that I didn’t know what I was aware of.” And I love that quote because it’s so true, man. Before you know what racism is, you’ve experienced it. And you’re just like, “Huh, that was weird. Why did that happen to me?” You know? And so I think the book is my effort to understand things that I needed to understand for myself. Even the way the book, I think, is structured subconsciously traces to the order in which I learned things, where we start in pre-colonial times.

A lot of the animating questions of the book stem from a reckoning with my own privilege, which is that I’m lucky enough to write this book in the first place, to be in a position where I had the education to write a book like this and have the time to work on a book like this. And it stems from this privilege that I did not necessarily see in the generation above me. So it’s like, “Okay, they sacrificed so I could have comfort.” Very classic immigrant story. But why is that the case? Why is it that they had to sacrifice to begin with, for my comfort? You know what I mean? When my friends’ parents didn’t have to sacrifice for their comfort, you know? And so it was sort of reckoning with my privilege. Like what was it over the course of all time, or at least as far back as I can trace, that led to me being born into the circumstances I was born into and allowed me to have these things.

And in a way, I sort of saw myself and every individual person as a sort of metaphor for America, which is that “Yeah, okay, richest nation, most powerful nation. What were the sacrifices made along the way?” To me, the real story of any empire’s rise is the sacrifice and suffering and toil that allowed it to happen. America would not span from a major continent between the two largest oceans and have all these natural resources if they didn’t genocide Native Americans. The wealth that the cotton industry was able to generate because of all the enslaved people who were purchased, bred, shipped in here, contributed largely to America’s original economic rise. So, America would not have the power it has if not for those oppressions. So that creates a natural guilt that I related to very much because I would not be able to benefit from the fruits from that bloody tree if my mom and my family didn’t come here and withstand the setbacks that the migrant generation experiences for the benefit of the second generation.

The real story of any empire’s rise is the sacrifice and suffering and toil that allowed it to happen.

A lot of the book, and also a lot of the sort of divergence between my perspective and the perspective of my elders, is from my position of privilege. I have the privilege to sit down in a lounge chair and think, “Hmm. How did I get all these luxuries?” You know what I mean? While if you’re the migrating generation, you ain’t got time for that shit. You’ve got kids to feed. You’ve got jobs to apply for. You’ve got so much happening. And that’s why I think in the first chapter, I had a line about how there’s something about being in the second generation that makes it easier to look at this, because I’m not the one who lived the sacrifice. I’m not the one that made the migration. I’m the one on the front row who benefited from inside, up close. And I think that’s sort of at the root of it. It’s a lot easier to care about other people of oppression when you’re not the one at the heart of the oppression. But if you feel you’re being oppressed, it makes it a lot harder to care about somebody else being oppressed before anyone deals with your oppression. 

And that’s part of the reason why my mom and I have diverged, because I’ve had the luxury of a very specific experience growing up and going to good schools in Northern California, being around a diverse collection of students, going to Columbia for journalism school, having jobs in these places that allow me to pursue my dreams and pay the bills and live the life that my mom dreamt for me. And so, for her, it’s like, yeah, this country is amazing. It all worked out. I’m happy. I could take care of her now. But for me, it’s something that I feel complicated feelings about, because these are successes that she worked for and wanted more than anything and sacrificed for. To her, they’re like unequivocable wins. But for me, as the person living it and benefiting from it, the natural question is like “Who had to sacrifice for these benefits? And how do I feel about that?”

MT: And is it worth it?

AS: And is it worth it?

MT: It’s interesting that being both writers, we both have this privilege that you describe, being paid in the ways that we are. But also, I can’t help but think of the meta-question that this book obviously involved extensive amounts of labor on your part. Speaking of toil and hardship, it might be a different form, but still. And it’s your second book. And I was wondering, as I was reading about the history of Filipino labor and the way in which Filipino identity is so tied to labor, that that’s one of the ways that we get ahead is that we work more than other people. Is that something that was present for you, and continues to be present for you, as you work in your life as an editor and an author? How do you contend with engaging with cultural reproduction, engaging with labor? And do you still feel like that’s still our path as Filipinos towards success in a country where our position is fragile?

AS: I’ve been told I have an unhealthy relationship with labor. You can interview any of my exes for that. I mean, I joke about it. It’s very easy for me to say I’m a workaholic because my work entails typing on a computer. You know what I mean? I can sort of romanticize working long hours because my long hours are sitting on a computer. So, that said, and maybe because of that, maybe because it’s a job that I consider much easier than the jobs any of my elders or ancestors had over the years, I’ve always sort of felt a duty to make sure that I squeezed every drop of juice from that fruit. I mean, I’ve always sort of been raised to really see the virtue of work ethic. My dad and I share that similar flaw (I probably got it from him) of just this idea that you get ahead by working harder than everybody else. So, ironically, I might have gotten it from the Lebanese side of me. 

I mean, it’s almost cliché to say that being part of an immigrant family involves thinking and caring deeply about working hard to prove your worth. And I do think that, at least subconsciously, and maybe even consciously sometimes, there was always that driving force of proving yourself worthy of the opportunities, of the sacrifices. I always knew. Even before I knew the details, I knew generally that my elders sacrificed for me. I didn’t know the scope of that sacrifice or the depth of it, but I knew that they had left their country to come here so that I would have more opportunities, whatever that meant. So there was always that impulse to not squander those opportunities. Even within my family, I was the spoiled one, I was the privileged one, because my dad had a lot of money. And even though my parents separated very young, his child support was able to ensure that she didn’t have to work all the time for many years until I was ten. She didn’t have to work. And no problem going to Catholic school in grade school, elementary school. So I had more toys than my cousins. 

So I always had this sense that I was more fortunate than even other people in my own generation, my own family. And I wanted to make sure I didn’t waste that. And I think, psychologically, perhaps what that did to me was to create this sense of value in putting in the hours. Not even a value. Like a reverence to it. I really do revere it in a way that my mom wishes I revered the Bible. Even before I was a writer, when I was a football player, I’d come in at 6:00 a.m. before school to lift weights and do some drills on the field by myself afterwards. And I think it was because I had opportunities that some of my closest friends and cousins didn’t have. I didn’t want to let people down. I didn’t want to let them down. I didn’t want to let my parents down. And I think that’s just sort of carried over. It’s like a mix of all those things, the sort of inherent Filipino work ethic, kind of immigrant “prove your worth,” and then also there’s like “Don’t squander the privilege that you have,” all sort of combined together, I think, to create the psyche I have now. I mean, two books in, I still haven’t taken a book leave.

The Weirdest Schools in Literature

Schools have their own set of rules and morality, rituals and language. What makes sense in an elite private Manhattan school—good grades, fancy clothes, the competitive sports of the wealthy (squash and tennis) can be entirely anathema in a progressive school where cooperation, eschewing of labels, and creativity are valued. In a small community, an outsider can never fit in or understand what goes on in the center. Sometimes the most ordinary school can be rendered creepy. The inhabitants—students and teachers—are stuck there after all until they graduate or retire. Throw in a charismatic leader, secret society, or strange ideology, and what you have is a cult.

In my novel The Pessimists, six couples wrestle with what it means to raise and educate children in a new century that seems destined to leave them behind. The Petra School promises a back-to-nuts-and-bolts education, but what it offers instead are elitist and poorly conceived ideas about children not firmly based in reality. Almost every parent struggles with their children’s schools at some point or another, whether the school is private or public, and educating children at times feels like wild speculation. One child thrives in an environment that is to another child’s detriment.

Many of us remember our high school years with the intensity as if they happened yesterday. I can barely remember anything that happened the year before the pandemic, but I can still smell my high school cafeteria at noontime. Bewildering things happen in schools all the time and there are often no other adult witnesses. The wildest things happen in schools: violence, sex, breakdowns and breakups, abusive teachers, bullying, tragedy, but comedy also. Boarding schools are especially ripe settings for novels and I’ve included four novels that take place in them. Carrie is the most American, most John Hughes of all the high schools on the list and Curtis Sittenfeld’s is perhaps the most benign. Ishiguro the most heartbreaking—the students are doomed from the start.

Here are the seven weirdest high schools in literature:

Trust Exercise

The Citywide Academy for the Performing Arts (CAPA) in Trust Exercise by Susan Choi

As grownups, we look back on our school years with bewilderment and sometimes bewitchment. Susan Choi’s Trust Exercise has all the culty elements I appreciate in a novel: an ’80s school culture I recognize, teenage romance, artistic ambition, unreliable narrators, surprise twists, and a dangerously charismatic leader. The Citywide Academy for the Performing Arts (CAPA) is a high school for talented drama students. The first third of Trust Exercise, features Mr. Kingsley, a charismatic teacher with an arbitrary set of rules and criteria for succeeding:

“His very way of gazing told them plainly how far they fell short….they felt their deficit all the more sharply because the unit of measure was wholly unknown.”

The last two-thirds spin the entire book on its head; the author pulling us through the high school gauntlet experientially: elliptical, circuitous, gaslighting.

The Time of the Hero

The Leoncio Prado Military Academy in The Time of the Hero by Mario Vargos Llosa, translated by Lysander Kemp

Originally titled La Ciudad y Los Perros, “The City and the Dogs”, this 1963 novel is set at the military academy in Lima that Llosa himself attended as a teenager and deals with the death of a student and the school’s subsequent cover up. This nonlinear story is told from multiple perspectives and was influenced by Faulkner who Vargas Llosa said he read with pencil and paper in hand trying to attempt to distill Faulkner’s style. The abuse and violence described was directly related to Vargas Llosa’s own 1950s experience as a student there in the 1950s and the publication of the novel so angered the administration that they went on to publicly burn 1,000 copies.   

Hailsham Boarding School in Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro

I love books where the slow reveal of the reality of a place is the central mystery. Indoctrination is the central theme of Ishiguro’s dystopian novel Never Let Me Go where young students reside unwittingly at a boarding school for future organ donors. The writing is gorgeous and gripping and as both a love story and a mystery, it also manages to explore questions of science decoupled from ethics. 

The Chocolate War by Robert Cormier

Trinity High School in The Chocolate War by Robert Cormier

“Do I dare disturb the universe?” reads the T.S. Eliot quote in Jerry Renault’s locker. If the main goal of a school is education, the second is to conform: to rules, to tasks, to groups, to an identity. Set at a fictional Catholic high school, The Chocolate War depicts a secret student organization’s manipulation of the students that sets a mob mentality against Jerry who is coping with depression after the death of his mother. When Jerry refuses to sell chocolates for the school’s annual fundraiser, the ire of the headmaster and the secret society are set upon him.  For any non-conformist, The Chocolate War strikes fear in the heart while imparting one note of comfort: you are not alone.

Prep by Curtis Sittenfeld

Ault School in Prep by Curtis Sittenfeld

Upper-class waspy prep schools are something I can’t get enough of. A club so elite they’d never accept me? Please, tell me more. I devoured this book when it came out. Being a Midwesterner myself, I also pined for the J Crew catalog-looking East Coast boarding schools and begged my mother to attend one. However, because we were not rich and I was a fairly terrible student, it was never going to happen. Prep is the quintessential fish out of water story: Lee is Midwestern, not rich, not schooled in the ways of the monied East Coast elite, but she wants desperately to fit in. She finds herself, at least initially, with the outsiders on the margins, but rejects them as she moves closer to the center. Ault School is full of the sort of arcane rituals one expects: names like Tig and Cross and Gates, summers in Nantucket, and the game of Assassin played throughout campus.

Carrie by Stephen King

Barker Street Grammar School in Carrie by Stephen King 

As a preteen, I read all of Stephen King but there was one book my mother would not let me read: Carrie. As kind of a skinny girl, scrappy and ugly, and one of the only kids in my school who did not attend a church or synagogue, she was concerned I would relate too much to Carrie’s loner status. By the time I did finally read it, I was solidly ensconced in a fairly normal teenage experience. It was no less horrifying. Carrie’s school is utterly ordinary and what’s terrifying in the end about the book is not Carrie’s retributive fury, it’s the cult of the ordinary: the horrors ordinary students will inflict on anyone who is different from them. 

The Passion Flower Hotel by Rosalind Erskine

St. Clara’s Boarding School in The Passion Flower Hotel by Roger Erskine Longrigg (writing as Rosalind Erskine)

I found this book on my father’s bookshelf when I was a kid and couldn’t resist this dusty ancient paperback. It’s wildly inappropriate and at the time felt irresistibly naughty. It’s the early 1960s and a group of girls are obsessed with losing their virginity. One of the girls reads a sociological study on prostitution and they are inspired to turn their English boarding school into a brothel for the boys across the lake. They call themselves “The Syndicate” and offer three services: Vision Only, Touch, and Nothing Barred. Other activities include a striptease and burlesque. Although funny and Woudhousian at times, the book is dated with racist elements and 1960s mores on gender and sex. Best read as a time capsule.

Trans Characters Are In Vogue, But Where Are the Thinkpieces?

In 2015, Casey Plett wrote about the rise of a particular kind of novel in Canada: ‘Call them the Gender Novels – books about Gender with a capital G.’ She describes the rise of non-trans authors writing sympathetic books about trans characters, exemplified by books like Jeffrey Eugenides’ Middlesex (2002) and Shani Mootoo’s Moving Forward Sideways Like a Crab (2014), and how they almost inevitably produce identikit main characters: flat, stereotypical sketches of trans people with no inner lives, who exist mainly to make cis readers feel edified.

If the only alternative were a return to The 40-Year-Old Virgin or CSI—using the trans character as a punchline or serial killer—then perhaps the Gender Novel, for all its literary deficiencies, would still have political merit. But that is not the only alternative. There are people out there writing good trans characters; many of those writers happen to be trans.

Casey Plett

2015 is a while ago now, particularly in trans years; the full-on Gender Novel has since become a little gauche in polite company (though it doesn’t stop everyone). But cis authors are writing about transness more than ever. So often, now, I’ll pick up a bestselling, award-nominated, comfortably popular literary novel – the kind you find on three-for-two tables in bookstores – and discover that it has a trans main character, or transness is a notable part of its plot. Girl, Woman, Other. Everything Under. The Ministry of Utmost Happiness. Frankissstein. The Vanishing Half. A Burning. The Perfect World of Miwako Sumida. Hurricane Season. The Mars Room. 10 Minutes 38 Seconds In This Strange World. How Much of These Hills is Gold. Going earlier: Infinite Jest, A Prayer for Owen Meany, Kafka on the Shore.

We are people of interest! We are the topic du jour. So, to ask bluntly: where are the thinkpieces? Usually, a common trend in fiction by cis people merits comment: I’ve read a lot of articles about novels where straight millennial women have mildly humiliating sex. In fact, seeing another one makes me emit the kind of high, keening sound a chicken might produce seconds before laying an egg. But for years, I’ve been watching the same cycle. A cis author produces a work full of rich and strange ideas about transness (often bad ideas, but compelling nonetheless); I wait for cis reviewers to say anything interesting about its use of transness; I get nothing. Well, I get something: avoidance, discomfort, transphobia, and a firm implication that transness is not for genteel literary discussion, even as all these lauded authors keep writing about it. 

Usually, a common trend in fiction by cis people merits comment: I’ve read a lot of articles about novels where straight millennial women have mildly humiliating sex.

Now, not everyone has the good taste to care about trans people as much as I do, and I know from personal experience that word counts are tight. I’m not demanding every trans cameo be documented in print. But there are multiple prominent reviews of Booker-winning novel Girl, Woman, Other that don’t mention the book’s nonbinary character, despite their existence being referenced in the book’s title, and despite their crucial dissenting role in a book about modern Black British womanhood. Or take Jeff VanderMeer’s review of Everything Under, a retelling of Oedipus with two trans main characters, where the tragic prophecy is fulfilled through the main character’s gender transition; the incredibly central importance of transness and transition is considered an afterthought – ‘The novel also explores gender roles and gender fluidity.’

The first two of those Girl, Woman, Other reviews incorrectly describe the twelve characters as all ‘women’ and ‘female’, which is also a mistake its author, Bernardine Evaristo, has made in interviews. Slips in terminology are common in reviews of books with trans themes, when they would easily be caught by a trans staff member, sensitivity reader, or robust style guide. It doesn’t take a degree in trans studies to learn not to call a trans woman of color a ‘sassy transvestite,’ or to avoid using terms like ‘female’ for trans men and nonbinary people. Nor does it take incredible reading skills to know that Conan, a character in The Mars Room, is a trans man, not a ‘trans woman’. (Some other reviewers call him a ‘female-to-male trans’, which was already an outdated term by the novel’s 2018 publication.) 

These slips are irritating, infuriating, even upsetting at times, but they’re impactful mainly because of how they betray a deeper lack of care and empathy. There’s a fundamental incuriousness here about why transness is in this book, and what it is doing or failing to do.    

There’s a fundamental incuriousness here about why transness is in this book, and what it is doing or failing to do.

If you read the newspaper reviews of Frankissstein (2019), Jeanette Winterson’s Booker-nominated reinterpretation of Frankenstein, you might get a similar initial sense that I did: a zany, imaginative, weird, comic novel that tackles cyborgs, feminism and AI. “Jeanette Winterson’s Playful New Novel Offers Thoughts on Mad Science and Sexbots,” reads the NYT’s headline; they describe the novel as ‘talky, smart, anarchic and quite sexy.’ The Independent calls it ‘light and comic’, full of ‘zany fun’, while various outlets focus on its hilariously loathsome sex doll seller and treatment of hot-button topics. When they mention Ry – the trans protagonist of one of the novel’s two narratives – it’s mostly casual, basic descriptions of their character: ‘The narrator is a trans man named Ry Shelley’ is the simple (and arguably inaccurate) summation in the Washington Post. Ry’s transness is of interest but is implied to be a simple fact rather than a driver of the novel’s events. There’s only a rare, slight glimpse of trouble, such as a throwaway comment in the LA Review of Books review about Victor, Ry’s sexual partner, ‘repeatedly assert[ing] that he is not gay.’ 

Forgive my shock when I actually read the book and found that Ry is subjected to an exhaustive array of minor and major harassments, culminating in a sickeningly graphic scene where they are clocked as trans in a men’s bathroom and viciously sexually assaulted. It felt like Ry was a martyr archetype who existed to experience pain, rather than a human person. Ry’s characterisation is flat and passive: they inexplicably answer invasive and threatening questions, they put up with fetishization and objectification from almost everyone they meet, and they talk like a cyborg. (They self-describe as ‘I am a hybrid’, which is admittedly pretty metal but is also more suggestive of a Toyota Corolla than any trans person I’ve ever met.) And it is irritating to see a novel treat trans bodies as freakish and newfangled. 

But what obsessed me after reading Frankissstein was going back to those reviews, trying to fathom the gulf between their descriptions and the novel itself. For whom is this fun? For whom is this light? What do cis people see when they read this? 

In Lian Konemann’s book The Appendix: Transmasculine Joy in a Transphobic Culture, Konemann describes keeping a list of transphobic things he encounters for a few months in 2019. Coincidentally, the first thing he mentions is a review of Frankissstein in the London Evening Standard:

You flit in this narrative between Shelley in the 19th century and our contemporary narrator, Dr Shelley, a transgender – of course! – medical doctor. S/he is called Ry, short for Mary (as in Mary Shelley), which makes you wonder why s/he isn’t called Ree, so as not to sound like Ryan. S/he started out female and has XY chromosomes but has had upper body surgery, no prosthetics and testosterone supplements which gives Ry an elongated clitoris – two centimetres, I think – and a satisfactory sex life.

‘Of course!’. For once, it’s clear enough what the reviewer sees when she looks at Ry: a mixture of obvious disdain (hence her ostentatious avoidance of their pronouns) and anatomical, objectifying interest. She sounds like a zoologist describing an abnormally developed frog. These are reviews of trans themes at their worst: they become a fun way for the reviewer to promote dehumanizing and hostile attitudes toward trans people. Regrettably, these are often the only reviewers who engage sustainedly with a book’s trans themes, but only out of voyeuristic delight at having an object to poke at. Specifically an ‘elongated clitoris,’ which plenty of cis women also have, by the way. 

These are reviews of trans themes at their worst: they become a fun way for the reviewer to promote dehumanizing and hostile attitudes toward trans people.

It’s clear that most reviewers don’t want to talk like this. However, lack of interest in trans people, anxiety about pissing people off, and lack of knowledge of trans subject matter tends to produce unsatisfying reviews. Avoidance is disappointing, as is an uncritical, magnanimous ‘oh, how lovely’ attitude towards the mere existence of trans representation. Transness has the curious capacity to turn off cis reviewers’ critical capacities. Part of this could likely be solved by having a robust style guide (which the Trans Journalists Association has), but part of it comes, I believe, from a desire not to poke the bear. I live in the UK, where most of our papers are openly trans-exclusionary, and even in the US there are almost no trans journalists stably employed in journalism. If reviewers talked more explicitly and seriously about transness, it might be more difficult to pivot to trans scare propaganda for your Sunday feature, or to blithely ignore trans people when we’re inconvenient. And wouldn’t that be a shame. 

In dangerous times, I would like to suggest a riskier approach to trans criticism, given that I have little to lose: what if we asked about why cis people are so interested in transness, and what function characters serve in cis novels? What if we admitted that, at least some of the time, trans characters are used as a way for cis authors to talk to other cis people, and asked about the messages they’re sending? What if we looked at the anxieties and prejudices folded into some portrayals of trans people, the genuine interest and desire for connection that come in others, and work backwards towards a trans criticism where cis people might, just might, be allowed to admit that they find us interesting and scary? What if we broke the awkward silence?

I Am Waiting To Be Built

Missense

Once, I followed the snow, watched as it blinked. 
In this language, to ask is to bury. In this language, 

eyes are less than mirrors. What is lost in translation: a bird 
is a beginning that sings; a horse is an untamed tongue. 

Pears are as good as boats are as good as stomachs 
in the bearing of rot. How they can only sink. 

In this language, the names that follow us are castles 
of memory. In this language, I am waiting to be built 

& to be seen. Do you remember what was asked? 
That is to say, do you remember how we were buried? 

How raindrops fell like stones. How they were only stones 
until we felt them. How we were only bodies 

until we fell.


Iteration

I am told again & again: there was light once, 
        in small motions. This is before my mouth 

was a bullet, rusting. Before my spine was a road to be 
        worn. All the ways to begin unwound. Here, 

floating in a mother’s stomach: the remains of typhoon 
        uncut. The sun is only an open wound if you stare 

too long. The sky is only a vault if you let it 
        hold you. Consider if the world was built 

on a Sunday. If it is still beginning. If we are still 
        beginning. Another telling, & I am reminded 

that the earth has teeth. That bodies are softness & the 
        shadows that follow. There was light once, 

& nothing to drown in it. Again & again, we are only as bright 
        as our stars. How quiet, this irreversible reaction,
 
these small tragedies. How terrible it is to be 
        the home of so much light.