Three on a Theme: Matrescence Memoirs (and a Bonus Novel)

I think of pregnancy and childbirth like any extreme adventure (skydiving, polar exploration): wholly extraordinary experiences with much to recommend them – though better appreciated retrospectively than in the moment – to which my response is a hearty “no, thanks.” But just as books have taken me to deserts and the frozen north, miles above or below the earth, into many eras and cultures, they’ve long been my window onto motherhood.

Matrescence, a word coined by anthropologist Dana Raphael in the 1970s, is the process of becoming a mother. It’s a transition period, like adolescence, that involves radical physical and mental changes and has lasting effects. And as Lucy Jones reports, up to 45% of women describe childbirth as traumatic. That’s not a niche experience; it’s an epidemic. If it was men going through this, you can bet it would be at the top of international research agendas.

These three memoirs (and a bonus novel) are bold, often harrowing accounts of the metamorphosis involved in motherhood. They’re personal yet political in how they expose the lack of social support for creating and raising the next generation. All four of these 2023 releases are eye-opening, lyrical and vital; they deserve to be better known.

 

Matrescence: On the Metamorphosis of Pregnancy, Childbirth and Motherhood by Lucy Jones

Like Jones’s previous book, Losing Eden, about climate breakdown and the human need for nature, Matrescence is a potent blend of scientific research and stories from the frontline. She has synthesized a huge amount of information into a tight 260-some pages that are structured thematically but also proceed roughly chronologically through her own matrescence. Not long into her pregnancy with her first child, a daughter, she realised the extent to which outdated and sexist expectations still govern motherhood: concepts like “natural childbirth” and “maternal instinct,” the judgemental requirement for exclusive breastfeeding, the idea that a parent should “enjoy every minute” of their offspring’s babyhood rather than admitting depression or overwhelm. After the cataclysm of birth, loneliness set in. “Matrescence was another country, another planet. I didn’t know how to talk about the existential crisis I was facing, or the confronting, encompassing relationship I was now in.”

Jones is now a mother of three. You might think delivery would get easier each time, but in fact the birth of her second son was worst, physically: she had to go into immediate surgery for a fourth-degree anal sphincter tear. In reflecting on her own experiences, and speaking with experts, she has become passionate about fostering open discussion about the pain and risk of childbirth, and how to mitigate them. Women who aren’t informed about what they might go through suffer more because of the shock and isolation. There’s the medical side, but also the equally important social implications: new mothers need so much more practical and mental health support, and their unpaid care work must be properly valued by society. “Yet the focus remains on individual responsibility, maintaining the illusion that we are impermeable, impenetrable machines, disconnected from the world around us.”

The hybrid nature of the book is its genius. A purely scientific approach might have been dry; a social history well-trod and worthy; a memoir too inward-looking to make wider points. Instead it’s equally committed to all three purposes. I appreciated the laser focus on her own physical and emotional development, but the statistical and theoretical context gives a sense of the universal. The literary touches – lists and word clouds, verse-like meditations and flash vignettes about natural phenomena – are not always successful, but there is a thrill to seeing Jones experimenting. Like Leah Hazard’s Womb, this is by no means a book that’s just for mothers; it’s for anyone who’s ever had a mother.

With thanks to Allen Lane (Penguin) for the free copy for review.

 

Milk: On Motherhood and Madness by Alice Kinsella

Kinsella is an Irish poet who became a mother in her mid-twenties; that’s young these days. In unchronological vignettes dated in relation to her son’s birth – the number of months after; negative numbers to indicate that it happened before – she explores her personality, mental health and bodily experiences, but also comments more widely on Irish culture (the stereotype of the ‘mammy’; the only recent closure of Magdalene laundries and overturning of anti-abortion laws) and theories about motherhood.

I liked this most when the author stuck close to her own sensory and emotional life; overall, the book felt too long and I thought a late segue into an argument against the dairy industry was unnecessary. Had I been the editor, I would have cut the titled essays and just stuck to the time-stamped pieces. At its best, though, this is a poetic engagement with the tropes and reality of motherhood, sometimes delivered in paragraphs that more closely resemble verse:

+1 I have become the common myth. Mother. The sleepy hum of early memories. The smell of shampoo, of Olay, of lavender. The feeling of safety. The absence of fear.

+2 There’s a possibility,
that we are among the happiest
people in the world:
mothers.

[Record freeze preserve.] Fighting death by reproducing our days. Fighting death by reproducing. Here: your life on paper. Here: their life to come.

We’re expected to be mothers the instant we lock eyes with our baby. To shed everything we were and be reborn: Madonnas.

The baby’s favourite thing to do is sit on my lap and interact with other people. This is what mothers are for, I think. Comfort, security, a place to get to know the world from.

The language is gorgeous, and while Kinsella complains of disorientation to the point of worrying about losing herself (although she had struggled with mental health earlier in life, the subtitle’s reference to ‘madness’ seemed to me like overkill compared to other memoirs I’ve read of postpartum depression, trauma or psychosis, such as Inferno by Catherine Cho and Birth Notes by Jessica Cornwell), she comes across as entirely lucid. Her goal here is to find and add to the missing literature of motherhood, in much the same way that Jazmina Barrera, another young mother and writer, attempted with Linea Nigra. This would also make a good companion read to A Ghost in the Throat by Doireann Ní Ghríofa.

Kinsella is among my predictions for the Sunday Times Charlotte Aitken Young Writer of the Year Award shortlist, along with Eliza Clark (Penance) and Tom Crewe (The New Life). (Public library)

 

The Unfamiliar: A Queer Motherhood Memoir by Kirsty Logan

I’ve read one of Kirsty Logan’s novels and dipped into her short stories. I immediately knew her parenting memoir would be up my street, but wondered how her fantasy/horror style might translate into nonfiction. Second-person narration is perfect for describing her journey into motherhood: a way of capturing the bewildering weirdness of this time but also forcing the reader to experience it firsthand. It is, in a way, as feminist and surreal as her other work. “You and your partner want a baby. But your two bodies can’t make a baby together. So you need some sperm.” That opening paragraph is a jolt, and the frank present-tense storytelling carries all through.

To start with, Logan’s wife Annie tried getting pregnant. They had a known sperm donor and did home insemination, then advanced to IVF. But after three miscarriages and a failed cycle, they took a doctor’s advice and switched to the younger womb – Logan’s, by four years. As “The Planning” makes way for “The Growing,” it helps that Annie knows exactly what she’s going through. The pregnancy sticks, though the fear of something going wrong never abates, and after the alternating magic and discomfort of those nine months (“You’ve reached the ‘shoplifting a honeydew’ stage”) it’s time for “The Birth,” as horrific an account as I’ve read. The baby had shifted to be back-to-back, which required an emergency C-section, but before that there was a sense of total helplessness, abandonment to unmanaged pain.

Finally the doctor comes. She asks what you would like, and you, shaking shitting pissing bleeding, unable to see when the pain reaches its peak, not screaming, not swearing, not being rude to anyone, not begging for an epidural, … say: I’d like to try some gas and air, if that’s okay, please.

What is remarkable is how Logan recreates this time so intensely – she took notes all through the pregnancy, plus on her phone in hospital and in the early days after bringing the baby home – but can also see how, even in the first hours, she was shaping it into a narrative. “You like that it’s a story. You like that it’s Gothic and gory … and funny.” Except it wasn’t. “You thought you were going to die.” And yet. “How can the lucid, everyday world explain this? The wonder, the curiosity, the recognition. The baby has lived inside your body, and you’ve only just met. The baby is your familiar, and deeply unfamiliar.”

This reminded me of other memoirs I’ve read about queer family-making, especially small by Claire Lynch, which similarly turns on the decision about which female partner will carry the pregnancy and is written in an experimental style. The Unfamiliar is utterly absorbing and conveys so much about the author and her family, even weaving in her father’s death seven years before. I’ve signed up for Logan’s online memoir-writing course (“Where to Start and Where to End”) organised by Writers & Artists (part of Bloomsbury) for next month.

With thanks to Virago Press for the free copy for review.

 


And, as a bonus, a short novel that deals with many of these same themes:

 

Reproduction by Louisa Hall

Procreation. Duplication. Imitation. All three connotations are appropriate for the title of an allusive novel about motherhood and doppelgangers. A pregnant writer starts composing a novel about Mary Shelley and finds the borders between fiction and (auto)biography blurring: “parts of her story detached themselves from the page and clung to my life.” The first long chapter, “Conception,” is full of biographical information about Shelley and the writing and plot of Frankenstein, chiming with Mary and the Birth of Frankenstein by Anne Eekhout, which I read last year. It’s a recognisable piece of autofiction, moving with Hall from Texas to New York to Montana to Iowa as she marries, takes on various university teaching roles and goes through two miscarriages and then, in the “Birth” section, the traumatic birth of her daughter, after which she required surgery and blood transfusions.

These first two sections are exceptional. There’s a sublime clarity to them, like life has been transcribed to the page exactly as it was lived. The change of gears to the third section, “Science Fiction,” put me off, and it took me a long time to get back into the flow. In this final part, the narrator reconnects with a friend and colleague, Anna, who is determined to get pregnant on her own and genetically engineer her embryos to minimise all risk. Here she is more like a Rachel Cusk protagonist, eclipsed by another’s story and serving primarily as a recorder. I found this tedious. It all takes place during Trump’s presidency [Laura F. told me I accidentally published with that saying pregnancy – my brain was definitely saturated with the topic after these reads!] and the Covid pandemic, heightening the strangeness of matrescence and of the lengths Anna goes to. “What, after all, in these end times we lived in, was still really ‘natural’ at all?” the narrator ponders. She casts herself as the narrating Walton, and Anna as Dr. Frankenstein (or sometimes his monster), in this tale of transformation – chosen or not – and peril in a country hurtling toward self-implosion. It’s brilliantly envisioned, and – almost – flawlessly executed. (Public library)

 

Additional related reading:

Notes Made while Falling by Jenn Ashworth

After the Storm by Emma Jane Unsworth

 

And coming out in 2025: Mother, Animal by Helen Jukes (Elliott & Thompson)

23 responses

  1. lauratfrey's avatar

    Your opening paragraph is great. “a hearty no thanks” made me laugh out loud! But the most disturbing part of this post is your freudian slip of “Trump’s pregnancy” 😉 These all sound interesting, and validating!

    Like

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Sorry your comment went to spam! That’s hilarious — ‘pregnancy brain’ for sure after the deep dive involved for this post. Thanks for alerting me to the error. I’m almost sorry to fix it 😉

      Like

  2. whatmeread's avatar

    Like you, I don’t have any kids and have gotten way past the stage where I want any, but I guess I don’t have much interest in reading about it either.

    Like

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      The way I think of it is, these sorts of questions affect all of us by extension, whether through siblings, cousins, niblings, friends, neighbors, or whatever. Ensuring maternal health and compassionate parental policies is a way of making a society that’s worth living in.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. whatmeread's avatar

        Well, that’s true. I am certainly not much of a nonfiction reader, though, too. Not compared to fiction anyway.

        Like

  3. Laura's avatar

    I love the concept of matrescence, and of these, the Lucy Jones appeals most to me – although I am not sure how many more motherhood-themed fictions or non-fictions I can read! I considered the Logan but skipped it in the end,

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I would definitely recommend Jones’s book to you, especially for its reading of historical parenting guides.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. […] and names her lost children after plants. Becoming a mother is a metamorphosis all its own (see my recent post on matrescence), while the second long section is about her husband transitioning. This is not […]

    Like

  5. Marcie McCauley's avatar

    What a great collection of reviews. I learned about Lucy Jones through a 5×15 interview (a series you put me onto, which I absolutely love and which has introduced me to many other previously-unknown-to-me writers and thinkers) but all of them sound interesting. The idea of the queer parents swapping roles, after so much heartbreak and frustration, is a curious layer that I’d like to read about but, at the same time, I’m not feeling pulled towards this theme. You make an excellent point above, however, that regardless of our individual experiences of mothering (or matrescence) we have all been born into families (present or absent).

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Thanks! I saw Lucy Jones speak about Losing Eden in person, just a couple of weeks before the first Covid lockdown, and got a copy signed.

      It’s so interesting to me that (barring Laura F.’s technical comment), my only engagement with this post has been from childless women…

      Like

  6. Naomi's avatar

    I’m here as a child-full woman to comment! It has taken me bits and pieces of the last three days to finally read through this post, but I was determined because the topic of motherhood (and all it entails) is fascinating to me.
    I have always felt as though I do not deserve to complain about my pregnancies and births because it all went relatively well for me – I am so lucky. I still feel that way, because I know how wrong it could have all gone (and has gone for others). But, even so, having given birth at all allows me to imagine how easily it could all lead to horror and trauma. Which always makes me wonder why it is so hard for women, biologically, to give birth. Even the best experiences are hard. And, knowing all this, why do we keep doing it?? It seems to me that strong biological instincts are at play. But, if that’s the case, why do some women not succumb to them? Not that I think they should (I’m all for childlessness)… I just wonder why some of us want and some of us don’t. And I wonder why it has to hurt so much. That’s all. 🙂
    I can also say that having more than one birth doesn’t make it easier – they are all unique, so you can’t even really know what to expect. In fact, I felt most scared the third time because I knew what I was in for. Lol
    I think, out of all these books, I’m most drawn to The Unfamiliar. But the fiction is also tempting.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I appreciate you reading and commenting, Naomi! To the first of your (probably rhetorical) questions, there’s a biological answer about evolution of brain size and infant helplessness in great apes … or a theological answer about punishment for original sin. I often joke to my husband that if I could lay eggs and put them under my cat for incubation, or grow them in a marsupial pouch, I would happily have children!

      My mother told me that she was afraid during her first pregnancy, but that by the time she had me she knew the delivery involved “good pain.” I think she didn’t want to scare me away from childbirth (I realized I’ve never heard either of my sister’s labour stories either), but it turns out aversion to bodily agony is only one of many reasons why I haven’t had children.

      I do feel slightly in awe of my friends and classmates who’ve had anywhere between 1 and 7 children, like they’ve been initiated into some great female secret that I have not, and lived to tell the tale. But I expect that not having children is going to become ever more common with the climate situation we’re in.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Naomi's avatar

        Laying eggs is a great idea!
        I have to admit, I did feel pretty proud of myself all three times, to think that I grew them and pushed them out like that. It’s kind of amazing. 🙂
        If I were you, I’d focus on the positive things about not giving birth – I can think of many! Enjoy it!

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Rebecca Foster's avatar

        I do, for the most part 🙂

        Like

  7. […] which my book club has applied to shadow. I’ve now read three of the nominees, the others being Matrescence and A Flat Place (review coming up tomorrow). Unsurprisingly, I’ve gravitated towards the ones […]

    Like

  8. […] read quite a lot about matrescence and motherhood so far this year, and I value these women authors’ perspectives on their […]

    Like

  9. […] story in a collection. A whole book? Not so sure. (Kirsty Logan got away with it, but only because The Unfamiliar is so short and meant to emphasize how matrescence makes you […]

    Like

  10. […] Reproduction by Louisa Hall: Procreation. Duplication. Imitation. All three connotations are appropriate for the title of an allusive novel about motherhood and doppelgangers. A pregnant writer starts composing a novel about Mary Shelley and finds the borders between fiction and (auto)biography blurring. It’s a recognisable piece of autofiction, with a sublime clarity as life is transcribed to the page exactly as it was lived. A tale of transformation – chosen or not – and peril in a country hurtling toward self-implosion. Brilliantly envisioned. […]

    Like

  11. […] the first time the author tweeted about it; it’s bound to be a good follow-up to Lucy Jones’s Matrescence. “When Helen Jukes falls pregnant, … she widens her frame of reference, looking beyond humans […]

    Like

  12. […] hybrid scientific memoirs of motherhood go, Lucy Jones’s Matrescence can’t be beat. For its social and political engagement, Jennifer Case’s We Are Animals is a […]

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