Review: Domenica Ruta's With or Without You
Domenica Ruta's With or Without You
is the autobiographical tale of a junkie's daughter, who navigates her
mother's needles and pills on the way to adulthood only to end up with
an addiction of her own. It's like Roald Dahl's Matilda, but without the magic or happy ending.
Ruta
writes about her childhood with detached sadness. Growing up in
Danvers, Massachusetts, she lives with her mother, Kathi, in the
basement apartment of the family house. Everyone knows Kathi as the
town drug addict, and the memoir opens with Kathi trying - and failing -
to smash a car's windshield with an iron poker. It tells you all you
need to know about her: she's violent and passionate and very, very
crazy. Outbursts like this came frequently between periods of extreme
happiness. While Ruta waits in fear of her mother's next episode, she
also encourages them. Ruta remains ominously addicted to her mother,
barely able to escape Kathi's gravitational pull even when she moves
across the country.
Although With or Without You
has the telling bumps of a first book, it clearly conveys how addiction
affects a family. Every town has a Kathi. Ruta gives readers a glimpse
into the life of the girl with the crazy mom, the girl whose house you
weren't allowed to go to.
With
that background, Ruta's own downfall seems inevitable, as she follows
in her mother's footsteps. She does pills with her mom and becomes a
functioning addict, trudging her way toward an MFA in writing. Yet even
while riding her own pill high, Ruta looks down upon her mother,
promising herself never to be like her. It is often hard to stomach
Ruta's hypocrisy, and hard to watch her justify her addictions. The
book's saving grace comes when Ruta realizes she has a problem and heads
for recovery.
Ruta
often leaves the reader wondering what's happening and why it's
happening. Jumping around in the narrative, she invites confusion. At
times this seems unintentional, but it also replicates for the reader
Ruta's own chaotic experiences of her mother's intense, passionate and
confusing love. Kathi praises and holds her daughter one minute, and
berates her the next. The family goes from inexplicable wealth to abject
poverty without warning. As hard as it is for the reader to make sense
of this, it was probably harder for Ruta to live it, and to sort it into
a memoir. Just as she couldn't escape ending up like her mother at one
point in her life, she couldn't help but make the memoir in Kathi's
image.
Domenica Ruta will be at the Brookline Booksmith on March 13 for a With or Without You reading, Q&A and signing.