Reading about Mothers and Motherhood: Cosslett, Cusk, Emma Press Poetry, Heti, and Pachico

It was (North American) Mother’s Day at the weekend, an occasion I have complicated feelings about now that my mother is gone. But I don’t think I’ll ever stop reading and writing about mothering. At first I planned to divide my recent topical reads (one a reread) into two sets, one for ambivalence about becoming a mother and the other for mixed feelings about one’s mother. But the two are intertwined – especially in the poetry anthology I consider below – such that they feel more like facets of the same experience. I also review two memoirs (one classic; one not so much) and two novels (autofiction vs. science fiction).

The Year of the Cat: A Love Story by Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett (2023)

This was on my Most Anticipated list last year. A Covid memoir that features adopting a cat and agonizing over the question of whether to have a baby sounded right up my street. And in the earlier pages, in which Cosslett brings Mackerel the kitten home during the first lockdown and interrogates the stereotype of the crazy cat lady from the days of witches’ familiars onwards, it indeed seemed to be so. But the further I got, the more my pace through the book slowed to a limp; it took me 10 months to read, in fits and starts.

I’ve struggled to pinpoint what I found so off-putting, but I have a few hypotheses: 1) By the time I got hold of this, I’d tired of Covid narratives. 2) Fragmentary narratives can seem like profound reflections on subjectivity and silences. But Cosslett’s strategy of bouncing between different topics – worry over her developmentally disabled brother, time working as an au pair in France, PTSD from an attempted strangling by a stranger in London and being in Paris on the day of the Charlie Hebdo terrorist attack – with every page or even every paragraph, feels more like laziness or arrogance. Of course the links are there; can’t you see them?

3) Cosslett claims to reject clichéd notions about pets being substitutes for children, then goes right along with them by presenting Mackerel as an object of mothering (“there is something about looking after her that has prodded the carer in me awake”) and setting up a parallel between her decision to adopt the kitten and her decision to have a child. “Though I had all these very valid reasons not to get a cat, I still wanted one,” she writes early on. And towards the end, even after she’s considered all the ‘very valid reasons’ not to have a baby, she does anyway. “I need to find another way of framing it, if I am to do it,” she says. So she decides that it’s an expression of bravery, proof of overcoming trauma. I was unconvinced. When people accuse memoirists of being navel-gazing, this is just the sort of book they have in mind. I wonder if those familiar with her Guardian journalism would agree. (Public library)

 

A Life’s Work: On Becoming a Mother by Rachel Cusk (2001)

When this was first published, Cusk was vilified for “hating” her child – that is, for writing honestly about the bewilderment and misery of early motherhood. We’ve moved on since then. Now women are allowed to admit that it’s not all cherubs and lullabies. I suspect what people objected to was the unemotional tone: Cusk writes like an anthropologist arriving in a new land. The style is similar to her novels’ in that she can seem detached because of her dry wit, elevated diction and frequent literary allusions.

I understand that crying, being the baby’s only means of communication, has any number of causes, which it falls to me, as her chief companion and link to the world, to interpret.

Have you taken her to toddler group, the health visitor enquired. I had not. Like vaccinations and mother and baby clinics, the notion instilled in me a deep administrative terror.

We [new parents] are heroic and cruel, authoritative and then servile, cleaving to our guesses and inspirations and bizarre rituals in the absence of any real understanding of what we are doing or how it should properly be done.

She approaches mumsy things as an outsider, clinging to intellectualism even though it doesn’t seem to apply to this new world of bodily obligation, “the rambling dream of feeding and crying that my life has become.” By the end of the book, she does express love for and attachment to her daughter, built up over time and through constant presence. But she doesn’t downplay how difficult it was. “For the first year of her life work and love were bound together, fiercely, painfully.” This is a classic of motherhood literature, and more engaging than anything else I’ve read by Cusk. (Secondhand purchase – Awesomebooks.com)

 

The Emma Press Anthology of Motherhood, ed. by Rachel Piercey and Emma Wright (2014)

There’s a great variety of subject matter and tone here, despite the apparently narrow theme. There are poems about pregnancy (“I have a comfort house inside my body” by Ikhda Ayuning Maharsi), childbirth (“The Tempest” by Melinda Kallismae) and new motherhood, but also pieces imagining the babies that never were (“Daughters” by Catherine Smith) or revealing the complicated feelings adults have towards their mothers.

“All My Mad Mothers” by Jacqueline Saphra depicts a difficult bond through absurdist metaphors: “My mother was so hard to grasp: once we found her in a bath / of olive oil, or was it sesame, her skin well-slicked / … / to ease her way into this world. Or out of it.” I also loved her evocation of a mother–daughter relationship through a rundown of a cabinet’s contents in “My Mother’s Bathroom Armoury.”

In “My Mother Moves into Adolescence,” Deborah Alma expresses exasperation at the constant queries and calls for help from someone unconfident in English. “This, then, is how you should pray” by Flora de Falbe cleverly reuses the structure of the Lord’s Prayer as she sees her mother returning to independent life and a career as her daughter prepares to leave home. “I will hold you / as you held me / my mother – / yours are the bathroom catalogues / and the whole of a glorious future.”

I connected with these perhaps more so than the poems about becoming a mother, but there are lots of strong entries and very few unmemorable ones. Even within the mothers’ testimonials, there is ambivalence: the visceral vocabulary in “Collage” by Anna Kisby is rather morbid, partway to gruesome: “You look at me // like liver looks at me, like heart. You are familiar as innards. / In strip-light I clean your first shit. I’m not sure I do it right. / It sticks to me like funeral silk. … There is a window // guillotined into the wall. I scoop you up like a clod.”

A favourite pair: “Talisman” by Anna Kirk and “Grasshopper Warbler” by Liz Berry, on facing pages, for their nature imagery. “Child, you are grape / skins stretched over fishbones. … You are crab claws unfurling into cabbage leaves,” Kirk writes. Berry likens pregnancy to patient waiting for an elusive bird by a reedbed. (Free copy – newsletter giveaway)

 

Motherhood by Sheila Heti (2018)

I first read this nearly six years ago (see my original review), when I was 34; I’m now 40 and pretty much decided against having children, but FOMO is a lingering niggle. Even though I already owned it in hardback, I couldn’t resist picking up a nearly new paperback I saw going for 50 pence in a charity shop, if only for the Leanne Shapton cover – her simple, elegant watercolour style is instantly recognizable. Having a different copy also provided some novelty for my reread, which is ongoing; I’m about 80 pages from the end.

I’m not finding Heti’s autofiction musings quite as profound this time around, and I can’t deny that the book is starting to feel repetitive, but I’ve still marked more than a dozen passages. Pondering whether to have children is only part of the enquiry into what a woman artist’s life should be. The intergenerational setup stands out to me again as Heti compares her Holocaust survivor grandmother’s short life with her mother’s practical career and her own creative one.

For the past month or so, I’ve also been reading Alphabetical Diaries, so you could say that I’m pretty Heti-ed out right now, but I do so admire her for writing exactly what she wants to and sticking to no one else’s template. People probably react against Heti’s work as self-indulgent in the same way I did with Cosslett’s, but the former’s shtick works for me. (Secondhand purchase ­– Bas Books & Home, Newbury)

A few of the passages that have most struck me on this second reading:

I think that is how childbearing feels to me: a once-necessary, now sentimental gesture.

I don’t want ‘not a mother’ to be part of who I am—for my identity to be the negative of someone else’s positive identity.

The whole world needs to be mothered. I don’t need to invent a brand new life to give the warming effect to my life I imagine mothering will bring.

I have to think, If I wanted a kid, I already would have had one by now—or at least I would have tried.

 

Jungle House by Julianne Pachico (2023)

{BEWARE SPOILERS}

Pachico’s third novel is closer to sci-fi than I might have expected. Apart from Lena, the protagonist, all the major characters are machines or digital recreations: AI, droids, a drone, or a holograph of the consciousness of a dead girl. “Mother” is the AI security system that controls Jungle House, the Morel family’s vacation home in a country that resembles Colombia, where Pachico grew up and set her first two books. Lena, as the human caretaker, is forever grateful to Mother for rescuing her as a baby after the violent death of her parents, who were presumed rebels.

Mother is exacting but mercurial, strict about cleanliness yet apt to forget or overlook things during one of her “spells.” Lena pushes the boundaries of her independence, believing that Mother only wants to protect her but still longing to explore the degraded wilderness beyond the compound.

Mother was right, because Mother was always right about these kinds of things. The world was a complicated place, and Mother understood it much better than she did.

In the house, there was no privacy. In the house, Mother saw all.

Mother was Lena’s world. And Lena, in turn, was hers. No matter how angry they got at each other, no matter how much they fought, no matter the things that Mother did or didn’t do … they had each other.

It takes a while to work out just how tech-reliant this scenario is, what the repeated references to “the pit bull” are about, and how Lena emulated and resented Isabella, the Morel daughter, in equal measure. Even creepier than the satellites’ plan to digitize humans is the fact that Isabella’s security drone, Anton, can fabricate recorded memories. This reminded me a lot of Klara and the Sun. Tech themes aren’t my favourite, but I ultimately thought of this as an allegory of life with a narcissistic mother and the child’s essential task of breaking free. It’s not clinical and contrived, though; it’s a taut, subtle thriller with an evocative setting. (Public library)

 

See also:Three on a Theme: Matrescence Memoirs

 

Does one or more of these books take your fancy?

16 responses

  1. Such an interesting post, thanks Rebecca! I’d love to do a round up of some of the recent flood of literature on being childless/’childfree’ when I have the time – I’ve been thinking a lot about how society presents wanting/not wanting children as a binary choice. A lot of writing about motherhood now rightly recognises ambivalence, but I’d be interested to hear from more women who decided against having biological children but don’t see themselves as either involuntarily childless or joyfully ‘childfree’ (hate that term). I’ve not had a chance to read the recent stuff yet so I don’t know if it does this or not.

    I loathe Cosslett’s self-centred and thoughtless journalism so I can confirm that her book sounds like more of the same. I’m now even more excited to read Jungle House, though!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. PS and I meant to say, that’s a beautiful photo of you and your mum x

      Liked by 1 person

    2. Just to echo and agree that nuance should be welcomed; as a woman who actively chose to not have children but then entered a relationship which involved actively parenting two (then-very-young) children, who’s not a “proper mother” but has made the kind of life-altering decisions (“sacrifices”) that accompany parenthood outside that official capacity…lots of us exist in spaces that don’t fit with expectations and labels.

      Liked by 2 people

      1. Thanks for sharing this, Marcie. Absolutely, and it’s why I was careful to specify *biological* children in my first comment – children become part of our lives for different reasons, and not always because we actively choose to conceive them. (I have also chosen not to have children but I do think there’s a world in which I could have wanted them – and I wouldn’t rule out (for example) fostering children in the future.)

        Liked by 1 person

      2. You are in an interesting in-between space as a step-parent, aren’t you? It’s important to acknowledge those nuances.

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    3. There have been loads of nonfiction surveys of childlessness recently. I’ve reviewed an Unbound anthology of essays that included some interesting perspectives including BIPOC, nonbinary and trans people, but mostly I don’t get around to these sorts of books anymore. A possible exception will be Others Like Me by Nicole Louie, forthcoming from Dialogue.

      Good to have your backup on the Cosslett!

      Thank you — the photo is actually from 2007. I keep it on my bedroom mantel. (I like your new thumbnail pic!)

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Thank you! Taken in Brooklyn botanic gardens!

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  2. I love this, from the Heti: “The whole world needs to be mothered. I don’t need to invent a brand new life to give the warming effect to my life I imagine mothering will bring.” Yes!!

    And as Laura says below, the photo of you and your mum together is just lovely.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. The Heti is overflowing with good quotes like that!

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Now I think you really must be on holiday? Or are you still on that boat? hee hee I thought of you this weekend and wondered how you were doing. Have you noticed that a lot of publishers now ask, well ahead of time, if you’d like to opt out of the upcoming Mother’s or Father’s Day emails? Was the framed photo a gift from your mom from long ago? It seems like a Mom present. 🙂 Being Heti-ed out is an apt descriptor but, like you, even when I feel that way, I seem to find all sorts of passages to flag. Her clarity of expression is remarkable. Even so, when I saw a copy of Alphabetical at the library last week, I looked past it entirely. She does take focus and my focus is elsewhere.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hello from France! It’s unfairly cold and rainy here, but we have had some good sunshine for meadow butterfly-spotting (although there’s also then the hayfever).

      I got a few of those opt-out e-mails from charities, etc. I guess it’s a good idea? But that e-mail itself is a trigger if one wishes to see it as such.

      The photo frame was actually a gift I gave her as a Mother of the Bride present at the time of my wedding. I can’t recall which photos she had in it over the years, but when going through some boxes of her things I decided to requisition it and put a favourite of mine in it.

      Alphabetical Diaries will be a Marmite book, I’m sure. I thought it brilliant.

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  4. I’m curious if this is the same Rachel Piercey whose children’s books I have at home!

    The only one I’ve read is the Sheila Heti which drove me crazy. As someone who always knew I wanted children, I don’t feel inclined to judge how other women come to that decision but my overall feeling about her book was that if she was struggling so much to decide, that was probably her answer.

    Rachel Cusk’s book intrigues me as someone who didn’t instantly bond with my firstborn. I am glad that there seems to be more grace around mothers sharing the harder parts of parenting now.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m thinking it must be the same Rachel Piercey!

      I know Heti is a very divisive writer, both for style and content.

      The Cusk is well worth reading.

      Liked by 1 person

  5. I don’t like Cosslett’s writing either so you have lots of permission not to like that one, if you needed it! Lovely to see Liz Berry mentioned in your Emma Press review (and I’m always weirdly excited to see people not in Birmingham reading EP books even though obviously they are national and even international!), she interviewed Andrew McMillan at the Bookshop and she is SUCH a good interviewer! It’s interesting in the comments seeing all these spaces in between choosing motherhood and choosing not-motherhood. I really hate assumptions (never made here or in the comments, of course) – I have had people a) assume I didn’t want children because I don’t have them (I did, I couldn’t have them), b) assume because I am a woman in her 40s-50s working from home I am a mumpreneur (obv not) and c) assume because I don’t have children I don’t like children or babies (I do). So we need all those spaces and nuances.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I love Emma Press books and am always happy to support them. Alas that I didn’t much care for Liz Berry’s recent collection that won the Writers’ Prize.

      I’m sorry you’ve encountered such insensitivity. A simple (tactful) question can be much better than making assumptions. Have you gotten better over the years at defusing unwonted curiosity with a practiced statement?

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      1. It’s one of those things that doesn’t happen often enough for me to be prepared! Just one of those things I suppose.

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