These essays are so personal they read more like a memoir – and the author is acutely aware of how she’s shaping the story of her life
Irish academic Emilie Pine’s probing essay collection Notes to Self is the small, independent Dublin-based publisher Tramp Press’s first foray into nonfiction. It’s easy to see how Pine’s voice tempted them to try something new, though. Her writing is clear and urgent, the kind that makes you sit up and take notice.
“By the time we find him,” begins the first piece, “he has been lying in a small pool of his own shit for several hours.” The collection’s tone is set here in this first essay, Pine is committed to exposing the blood and guts of life and death.
It’s Pine’s father – also an academic – who taught her “that writing is a way of making sense of the world, a way of processing – of possessing – thought and emotion, a way of making something worthwhile out of pain”. Notes to Self is the product of this act of metamorphosis: within its pages, messy raw experience is transformed into meaningful, honed prose.
Just when we’ve read enough to think we know her, she throws us a curveball in the form of “Something About Me”, an account of her unexpectedly wild teenage years. These essays are so personal – she writes about her experiences of sexual violence, and the final piece, “This is Not on the Exam”, deals with the misogyny she’s encountered in the workplace – the collection actually often reads more like memoir.
No doubt many will be calling Pine brave – the go-to description for a woman writer exposing herself on the page – but the truth is in recent years we’ve come to expect nothing less than intimate confession from female practitioners working in the fields of personal essays and memoir.
As such, I don’t quite buy the publisher’s claim that the collection “breaks new ground”, but Notes to Self is still well worth reading – not just for Pine’s no nonsense honestly when it comes to subjects many of us still aren’t comfortable discussing, but also because she’s acutely aware of how she’s shaped the story of her life in these pages.
’Notes to Self’ is published by Tramp Press.
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