Dreaming Home
By (Author) Lucian Childs
Biblioasis
Biblioasis
12th October 2023
Canada
General
Fiction
Narrative theme: Coming of age
Paperback
200
Width 127mm, Height 203mm, Spine 10mm
A queer coming-of-ageand coming-to-termsfollows the after-effects of betrayal and poignantly explores the ways we search for home.
When a sisters casual act of betrayal awakens their fathers demonsones spawned by his time in Vietnamese POW campsthe effects of the ensuing violence against her brother ripple out over the course of forty years, from Lubbock, to San Francisco, to Fort Lauderdale. Swept up in this arc, the members of this family and their loved ones tell their tales. A queer coming-of-age, and coming-to-terms, and a poignant exploration of all the ways we search for home, Dreaming Home is the unforgettable story of the fragmenting of an American family.
Praise for Dreaming Home
"The marvel of Childs small book is its sharp, heartbreaking examination of how the people we love are also affected by our trauma, are witnesses sometimes to it, and live in its lifetime of complex, difficult reverberations, all from that singular hurtful moment, that seemingly insignificant choice in our past. Childs understands the true gravity of trauma, extending beyond just the traumatized individual to the friends, family, and lovers beside us, and in these six dazzling, entwined stories he maps their orbits around their damaged polestar. Because of this, its their collective storyeach characters voice amplifying the othersthat glows the brightest."
Patrick Earl Ryan, author of the Flannery OConnor Award-winning short story collection, If We Were Electric
"Both intimate and far-reaching, Dreaming Home movingly explores how people change, and how they dont; how they heal, and how they cant ... or maybe still can. There is seemingly no life Childs cant dream his way into, and every character in this beautiful book is drawn with empathy and tenderness."
Caitlin Horrocks, author of The Vexations
"Dreaming Home is nothing short of a conjuring act. In Kyle, Lucian Childs has created a living, suffering man out of negative space. Yet we come to know him, and feel for him, thanks to the cast of funny and flawed characters whose lives he touches. Through their love, exasperation, and remorse, the void that is Kyle miraculously takes on its human shape. Entertaining and wise, Dreaming Home is wonderful debut."
Caroline Adderson, author of Bad Imaginings and A History of Forgetting
Dreaming Home is the propulsive tale of how one act of cruelty can reverberate through many lives and for many decades. Childs intricately and carefully brings to life the constellation of characters who circle around Kyle and his queer coming of age. Dreaming Home poses brilliant and important questions, forcing the reader to consider the power we have over one another and the twisted and painful paths life can take toward joy."
Lydia Conklin, author of Rainbow Rainbow
"In Dreaming Home, Lucian Childs constructs, from various perspectives, the life of Kylea young gay man traumatized early in life, first by his father and then by conversion therapywho is searching for, as the title suggests, that most elusive of things: home. As he takes us from Texas to San Francisco to Florida, Childs brings it allcompelling prose, first-rate storytelling, and a bittersweet and utterly effecting renegotiation of the meaning of family."
Lori Ostlund, author of After the Parade
Praise for Lucian Childs
The stories of Lucian Childs are marked by their breath and diversity of charactersnot just gender ... but age, economics, level of education, and types of concerns and life problems. He can be funny, he can be poetic, but his humor is always the appetizer toward a main course of slightly darker journeys, of the sadness and even desperation that attends the exploration of identity.
Nancy Zafris, author of The Home Jar
Lucian Childs has been a Peter Taylor Fellow at the Kenyon Review Writers Workshop. He is a co-editor of Lambda Literary finalist Building Fires in the Snow: A Collection of Alaska LGBTQ Short Fiction and Poetry. Born in Dallas, Texas, he has lived in Toronto, Ontario, for fifteen years, since 2015 on a permanent basis.