As I began my healing journey from childhood sexual abuse and violence, I've often spoken of my journey through undefining and redefining my life, my loves, and how I experience the world.
You could call it deconstruction, though I've often preferred to see it as reconstruction.
I am and always have been uncomfortable with the word love, a word primarily used in my childhood by my perpetrator with whom it would always be followed by sexual assault.
I read Carvell Wallace's without intent for review, instead hoping for a hopeful, healing, and soulful journey with which I could relate as recent body changes have sort of taken me down a revisit through healing of my body image and my relationship with self and others.
Wallace is an award-winning writer who had a realization when he was 12-years-old - he couldn't rely on anyone else. Having grown up unhoused for a year, at times sleeping in a car with his mother, has come to realize this response as a "wounded response."
Indeed, throughout "Another Word for Love" Wallace shares both his vulnerability and his exhilaration in equal measure. He writes about his early years with and without his mother, his journey through addictions, his journey as a writer and parent, and finally living into what it means to be a queer Black man.
"Another Word for Love" is a memoir in essays, a collection of soul-filled urgencies seeking to find this other word for love, a road toward healing, and an embrace of a reclaimed life.
While one could, I suppose, argue that "Another Word for Love" meanders at times, I found this exhilarating because it reflected Wallace's stops and starts of life and his discovering for himself new joys, wonders, hard stops, and difficult lessons. I found myself deeply moved by discussions on consent, discussions that I think are so deeply important and that will resonate with so many.
Always an important social voice, Wallace turns the lens inward with "Another Word for Love: A Memoir" and tells a story of a spirit-filled life with grief, forgiveness, vulnerability, and another word for love all rising to the surface and embraced by this courageous, tender, and vibrant author.