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House Within a House

by (author) Nicholas Dawson

translated by D.M. Bradford

Publisher
Brick Books
Initial publish date
May 2023
Subjects
LGBT, Caribbean & Latin American, Canadian

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  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781771316088
    Publish Date
    May 2023
    List Price
    $13.99

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Description

A meditation on the wiles of depression, illuminated by queer and diasporic experience.

"We, nosotros, nosotras: somos sobrevivientes." Weaving prose poetry, essay, autobiography and photography in mutual contamination, Nicholas Dawson relates his own deep depression, a state never fully gone, always cohabitant. Amidst this persistence, "the body and the pen bring a plural syntax of alternative knowledges into being, one which allows us to know the world better, to know ourselves better, to better love daybreak and this sun obstinately piercing the curtain with its brazen rays."

House Within a House, in a luminous translation by David Bradford, tells the story of what walls the depressed person in, what keeps them wandering inside, and what finally gets them, somehow, out of the house. The original book, Désormais, ma demeure, received the 2021 Grand Prix du livre de Montréal.

About the authors

Born in Chile and based in Montréal, Nicholas Dawson is a writer, scholar, and the Literary Director of Éditions Triptyque. He is the author of La déposition des chemins (La Peuplade, 2010), Animitas (La Mèche, 2017), and Désormais, ma demeure (Triptyque, 2020), for which he received the Grand Prix du livre de Montréal and the Blue Metropolis Diversity Prize. He is also the co-author of Nous sommes un continent. Correspondance mestiza (Triptyque, 2021, with Karine Rosso), and the editor of many anthologies.

Nicholas Dawson's profile page

David Bradford is a poet, editor, and organizer based in Tiohtià:ke (Montréal). He is the author of several chapbooks, including Nell Zink is Damn Free (Blank Cheque Press, 2017) and The Plot (House House Press, 2018). His work has appeared in The Capilano Review, The Tiny, filling Station, The Fiddlehead, Carte Blanche, and elsewhere. He holds an MFA from the University of Guelph and is a founding editor of House House Press. Dream of No One but Myself is his first book.

D.M. Bradford's profile page

Excerpt: House Within a House (by (author) Nicholas Dawson; translated by D.M. Bradford)

Daybreak already: the sun’s brazen rays pierce the curtain and caress the walls as if they were soft. I catch their tenderness, día tras día, on full display, as my barely open eyes declares war on the world, starting with the concrete ceiling. The battle will be a hard one, I tell myself, la lucha será. La lucha is shipping out to the front lying down, muzzled, la garganta llena de polvo, throat full of tangling tongues, words on repeat, día tras día, like a square looming over the eyes, la garganta llena de yesterday’s phrases, simple, incomplete, the battle will be. The rays reach me rough, overbearing. The ceiling, triumphant: every day, every morning, the world has me.

*

TO WRITE ESSAYS NOT ONLY ABOUT DEPRESSION but first and foremost about a process of research and creation in order to avoid recounting the depressive episode and the months-long leave of absence — depression is a trip that can’t be recounted without calling up memories, impressions, reflections, theories, sciences and works one by one; the story of the hurt then turns into study, chronicle, analysis, inquiry, notebooks, journal, fragments. Depression quietly metamorphoses in front of you, by you, into a hybrid and malleable thing outside of yourself, a thing you move, paragraph by paragraph, alongside everything you can conjure up so that the past, the experiences, and the ideas converse. Without these conversations, memory, so splintered by the shockwaves of depression, remains mute. Trauma memory has no narration. Stories always take place in time. And depressive time is a time that fails like language fails you, like words fail you. It’s not altogether possible, then, to recount depression (I don’t discuss it much with those I’m close to because, among other reasons, the feeling of inexactitude that accompanies such discussions is unbearable — I always think that’s not quite it, I’m making things up here, I’m obscuring things there), that is, to align the different times the depression has isolated to make a single one, that of the story. Better to make visible the borders, the ruptures, the divides between excruciatingly fragmented times, along with the efforts deployed to give them meaning and distance without denying, without dissapearing, the suffering they provoke. To do it in the construction — you could call it fiction: pictures, poems, stories, essays.

*

I wordlessly bang my head on the frame, I lose count, se me olvidan las palabras — my syntax fails me like sleep. So I attempt a bit of light. At the window, I place my reflection beneath the floodlights, but the same darkness crops up before me: the night outside, my sunken eyes, my opaque body. So I attempt a bit of clarity: with the tip of my finger on the pane of glass, I draw out my outline, go over the edge a bit. It makes up new streams and a new path, an ersatz of night, of endless promises for words and images for tomorrow. I tremble at the thought of it, with an ailing joy that’ll keep me awake for hours; it’s terror and ecstasy, this convulsive delight leading me to the end of the road — ¿noche enterna o madrugada? I attempt a bit of hope, I say let’s see tomorrow if the battle will be.

Editorial Reviews

"The searching, confessional, and deeply intelligent voice of House Within a House is a flashlight beam that takes the reader into and through the territory of a depression — but this light lingers, so that at the book's close we are left with the glow of language naming the overlooked, blinking at its cumulative power." — Sadiqa de Meijer

"Nicholas Dawson's House Within a House is about the creative process and all the anguish and hard-fought joy that surrounds it. This book, which so expertly employs philosophical, memoiristic, and visual modes, is deeply human; it seeks to affirm in all of us the part of our personhood that waits for us 'on the other side of depression' — a task as urgent as any in our current moment. This book will mean a lot to a whole range of readers." — Billy-Ray Belcourt