Like happiness

Ursula Villarreal-Moura

Book - 2024

"A searing debut about the complexities of gender, power, and fame, told through the story of a young woman's destructive relationship with a legendary writer. It's 2015, and Tatum Vega feels that her life is finally falling into place. Living in sunny Chile with her partner Vera, she spends her days surrounded by art at the museum where she works. She loves this new life, but more than anything, she loves it for helping her forget the decade she spent in New York City; the years she spent orbiting the brilliant and famous author M. Domínguez. But when a reporter calls from the US asking for an interview, the careful separation Tatum has constructed between her past and present begins to crumble. Domínguez has been accused ...of assault by another woman, and the reporter is looking for corroboration. Tatum agrees to tell her story, but she begins with a clarification: while there are similarities, what happened to the other woman is not what happened to her. As Tatum is forced to reexamine the all-consuming but undefinable relationship that dominated so much of her early adulthood, long-buried questions surface. What did happen between them? And why is she still struggling with the mark the relationship left on her life? Searching for clarity, Tatum decides to tell her story a second way as well: in the form of a letter to Domínguez, recounting and reclaiming the totality of their relationship, from the moment they met to the night the relationship imploded. Told in a dual narrative that alternates between Tatum's present-day and her letter, Like Happiness explores the nuances of a complicated and imbalanced relationship, catalyzing a reckoning with gender, celebrity, memory, Latinx identity, and the unexpected ways power dynamics can manifest"--

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FICTION/Villarreal-Moura, Ursula
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Subjects
Genres
Queer fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Celadon Books 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Ursula Villarreal-Moura (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
288 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781250882837
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

When Tatum Vega first delves into Happiness, by renowned writer M. Dominguez, she's captivated by short stories that mirror her own life and reflect her Chicana culture. Drawn to the author and his writing, Tatum emails him. Her email exchanges with Mateo lead to phone calls, culminating in a decade-long close friendship that edges toward romance. Navigating her fascination with Mateo while figuring out her own identity and life purpose, Tatum finds moments of self-discovery as Mateo wields a strong influence over her. Set between Tatum's present day in Chile, 2015, and her prior life in New York City, Villarreal-Moura's first novel relates Tatum's experiences firsthand. In the present, Mateo is accused of egregious abuse, and investigative reporter Jamal contacts Tatum to inquire about her experiences with the writer. Year by year, the layers of their relationship are revealed, reaching a crescendo that prompts the question: what did Mateo do to sever their friendship? This compelling read delves into the idealism of youth, the harsh lesson of learning whom to trust, and the complexities of self-actualization.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In Villarreal-Moura's accomplished first novel (after the chapbook Math for the Self-Crippling), an American expat in Chile reckons with the fraught friendship she had with an older novelist that began when she was in college. A dual timeline narrative portrays the relationship's origins. Tatum Vega, a Texan enrolled at Williams College in 2000, writes a fan letter to lauded Puerto Rican short story writer M. Dominguez, and their correspondence rapidly escalates into an obsessive friendship and occasional romance. After graduation, Tatum moves to New York City to be closer to the writer, who insists she call him Mateo. In 2015 Santiago, where Tatum lives with her partner Vera, she's contacted by a New York Times reporter who's writing an exposé on Dominguez's alleged sexual assault of another young Latinx woman. Addressing her narration to Mateo--"I'm sure you recall that the New York Times Book Review devoted two full pages to the release of your long-awaited novel"--Tatum slowly builds to the alarming revelation in that novel's pages that sent her far away from the writer. Questions of whether and how Mateo groomed Tatum reverberate throughout the subtle and satisfying narrative. This leaves readers with much to chew on. (Mar.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A woman recalls her friendship with a man caught in the grip of the #MeToo movement. In Santiago in 2015, Tatum Vega lives with her girlfriend, settled into her life as a museum employee far from her working-class roots in San Antonio, Texas. She's contacted by a journalist from the New York Times who wants to know about her relationship with the writer M. Dominguez, who has been accused of sexual improprieties. Initially reluctant to discuss her friendship with M., whom she knows as Mateo, and cautioning the journalist that she was never sexually mistreated by him, Tatum finally agrees to a series of conversations; eventually, this onslaught of memories causes her to chronicle her time with M. Addressing Mateo in the second person, Tatum recounts her past as a transplanted Tejana at Williams College in Massachusetts, a place she picked so she could be close to the history of literary heroes like Sylvia Plath. Her desire to exist merely as a "pulsating mind" leaves her lonely and largely friendless; her status as Latina in the white-dominated worlds of the arts and humanities leads her to reach out to the Latino author of the short story collection Happiness, her favorite book. The fan letter she writes kickstarts a decade of a (mostly) platonic relationship in which Tatum and Mateo endure failed romances, Mateo struggles to write a novel, and Tatum gradually comes to understand her sexuality. As the chronicle barrels toward the moment when the relationship implodes, Tatum realizes there are many different kinds of violation. Though Villarreal-Moura's writing style is a bit buttoned-up, her emotionally astute novel offers a moving perspective on the different kinds of victims abusers leave in their wake. Memorable and incisive, this debut grapples elegantly with the complexity of betrayal. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.