Jessie Cole's memoir investigates desire after trauma
- Written by Lisa Featherstone, Associate Professor in Australian History and the History of Sexuality, The University of Queensland
Desire: A Reckoning[1] is a remarkable contemporary memoir. Its author, Jessie Cole, is unafraid to be vulnerable – in her life and her writing. This, her fourth book (and second memoir) is an extraordinary exploration of both physical and emotional desire, and the fraught limits of passion, need and want. Cole’s romantic desires are set against deep family tragedy[2]: the suicide of her sister, and then, some years later, the suicide of her father.
Against layers of thinking about love, desire, bodies and ecological disaster, Desire traces a love affair, a long-distance relationship between Cole and an unnamed, older lover.
Though Cole’s experiences of sex, love[3] and family are all quite different to my own, I had an almost visceral reaction at many moments: this book elicited a sharp gasp of recognition more than once.
Review: Desire: A Reckoning – Jessie Cole (Text Publishing)