“As a writer I am used to filling these gaps with story, pouring one letter after the other into the little cavities in my mouth.” Sophia Hembeck’s Things I Have Loved is the second instalment in a trilogy of memoirs, though it stands on its own (I still need to read the first volume myself). It is a reflection on love and narrative told through essay fragments, slipping through shards of memory and literature. Hembeck asks so many pertinent, difficult questions about love: “People wonder after a break-up, after a loss: Where does the love go? Is it blown away like dandelion puffs? To be sown in better places? Or can I take that love — take it all — and let the seeds fall onto me?” She reflects on singleness and a lack of male friends amongst her and friends, as well as reflecting on the ways romantic love is seen to eclipse other types of love (reminiscent of Amy Key’s recent book); elsewhere, in the longest section of the book, Hembeck explores male fragility, corporal punishment, love, and self-esteem in a surprising narrative turn. It is clear that Hembeck has been greatly influenced by Deborah Levy’s own trilogy of memoirs, as well as other writers I love, like Joan Didion (just before referencing Didion’s famous about telling ourselves stories, Hembeck opines “People will go to great lengths to protect their stories”). In other places, Hembeck reflects on repairing a damaged connection with a loved one: “Trust cannot be built in a minute of compassion when there has been a lifetime of damage. It’s an ongoing conversation.” I’m excited to see where this trilogy will end — thanks Sophia for sending me a copy of the latest instalment!