Ebook Evaluation
Sweetener
By Marissa HigginsCatapult: 272 pages, $27If you purchase books linked on our website, The Occasions might earn a fee from Bookshop.org, whose charges help unbiased bookstores.
In 1984, at age 33, I fell in love with a lady for the primary time. Her title was Cathy. Her earlier girlfriend’s title was additionally Cathy. “Wasn’t that confusing, sharing a name with your girlfriend?” I requested. She shrugged. “Everything about being a lesbian is confusing at first,” she mentioned. “You get used to it.”
In “Sweetener,” Marissa Higgins’ attractive, poignant second sapphic novel, the reader is served loads of confusion, lesbian-related and in any other case. For starters, two of the ebook’s three protagonists, who’re breaking apart as we meet them, are each named Rebecca. With 18,993 ladies’ names in energetic use in up to date America, why would Higgins construct this disconcerting ingredient into “Sweetener’s” construction? It proves to be a choice well-made. Because the reader turns the pages, studying to individuate the 2 Rebeccas (whose central battle is studying to individuate from one another) offers us bonus details about, and empathy for, each of them.
“My wife and I have the same first name, though our friends never used mine; I’ve always been Rebecca’s wife,” Rebecca No. 1 says of Rebecca No. 2 — No. 2 being the extra highly effective one, since she’s the one initiating the breakup. “Our last names, too, are still the same, as I took hers at our court wedding,” No. 1 tells us. “With the same name, it’s easy to become one person instead of two.”
Making use of for a part-time cashier job close to her dismal D.C. house, Rebecca No. 1 mulls, “Inside the market, I remind myself I am a person. I have an age, a birthday, an address.” When the shop supervisor asks about Rebecca’s hobbies, she thinks, “Making rent? Getting myself off? Finding a woman with more money than either of us to take me to the dentist?”
The participating, unique plot of “Sweetener” is advanced, too. Unbeknownst to Rebecca No. 1, she and No. 2 (PhD scholar, much less depressed, extra conniving, heavy drinker) are each relationship Charlotte. Obsessive about having a child, Charlotte wears a faux being pregnant stomach, a reality recognized solely to Rebecca No. 2, as a result of Charlotte retains her shirt on whereas having intercourse with Rebecca No. 1. (Having Charlotte considering, “Please don’t notice please don’t notice please don’t notice” to cowl Rebecca No. 1’s failure to note that her sexual companion is sporting an enormous baby-shaped silicone belt appears a little bit of an, um, stretch.) Each Rebeccas have nice intercourse with Charlotte. Neither Rebecca desires to cease.
Rebecca No. 2 additionally desires a child and doesn’t wish to cease ingesting, which suggests not bearing however as an alternative fostering a baby, which suggests enlisting Rebecca No. 1 within the effort, for the reason that two are nonetheless legally married, and fostering as a single divorcee requires a minimal one-year authorized separation. Neither Rebecca is for certain whether or not pretending to be married will outcome of their precise reconciliation. Solely Rebecca No. 1 is for certain that she desires that.
“I know it’s not fair of me to ask anything of you,” Rebecca No. 2 admits in a cellphone name to her soon-to-be ex-wife, “but I’m serious about wanting to have a family.”
“Sweetener” is the second novel by Marissa Higgins.
(Catapult)
Determined as she is for a reconciliation, Rebecca No. 1 mulls, “When she says she wants me to think about how important a family is to her, and what this could mean for her, I understand she is not using the word we… I tell her I miss her and she says she misses me, too. Then she says, ‘So you’ll come by when the social worker is here?’”
In 1984, after I dated Cathy No. 2, just like the Rebeccas, many of the lesbians I knew have been younger, poverty-stricken and uncomfortably enmeshed with their lovers, they usually thought-about “lesbian” to be their main id. In contrast to the Rebeccas, we have been additionally terrified by the implications of being out throughout what have been extraordinarily harmful instances. Through the Nineteen Eighties and Nineties, Cathy and I have been chased down metropolis streets by males shouting slurs at us. We have been refused rooms in accommodations. Cathy would have been fired from her childcare job if she’d come out at work. My custody of my youngsters was threatened. I used to be banished from my father’s dwelling.
“My wife and I go to our first class on child development together,” Rebecca No. 1 tells us. “Next to my wife, I feel cool.” A couple of pages later, she observes: “The social worker tells me I’m lucky to have a partner who values non-threatening communication.” Throughout their dwelling go to with a second D.C. social employee, the Rebeccas lie about lots of issues — mainly, their marital and monetary instability. However they don’t lie about what Cathy and I’d have needed to cover if we’d tried to undertake a baby within the Nineteen Eighties. Residing in a giant, liberal metropolis, the Rebeccas don’t really feel the necessity (nonetheless required for security in “red” locales) to name one another roommates or mates. They name one another wives, as a result of in 2025 same-sex marriage and parenting are givens, not distant fantasies.
Ten years after it grew to become “cool” (and authorized, and publicly acknowledged) for a lady to have a spouse; 40 years after I and lots of, many others paid a horrible worth for popping out in our households, workplaces and neighborhoods, lesbians like Marissa Higgins are creating lesbian characters who reside in a sweeter, changed-for-the-better world. The sugar that made life safer for us is the queer activism that begins with telling true tales of queer lives and persists as we speak with renewed want and renewed vigor. “Sweetener,” the novel, is a enjoyable romp by means of one model of lesbo-land circa 2025. Higgins’ “Sweetener” celebrates and accelerates the lengthy, tough experience to lasting queer equality.
Maran, creator of “The New Old Me” and different books, lives in a Silver Lake bungalow that’s even older than she is.