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Detransition, Baby: A Novel Hardcover – January 12, 2021
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“Reading this novel is like holding a live wire in your hand.”—Vulture
One of the New York Times’s100 Best Books of the 21st Century
Named one of the Best Books of the Year by more than twenty publications, including The New York Times Book Review, Entertainment Weekly, NPR, Time, Vogue, Esquire, Vulture, and Autostraddle
PEN/Hemingway Award Winner • Finalist for the Lambda Literary Award, the National Book Critics Circle Award, and the Gotham Book Prize • Longlisted for The Women’s Prize • Roxane Gay’s Audacious Book Club Pick • New York Times Editors’ Choice
Reese almost had it all: a loving relationship with Amy, an apartment in New York City, a job she didn't hate. She had scraped together what previous generations of trans women could only dream of: a life of mundane, bourgeois comforts. The only thing missing was a child. But then her girlfriend, Amy, detransitioned and became Ames, and everything fell apart. Now Reese is caught in a self-destructive pattern: avoiding her loneliness by sleeping with married men.
Ames isn't happy either. He thought detransitioning to live as a man would make life easier, but that decision cost him his relationship with Reese—and losing her meant losing his only family. Even though their romance is over, he longs to find a way back to her. When Ames's boss and lover, Katrina, reveals that she's pregnant with his baby—and that she's not sure whether she wants to keep it—Ames wonders if this is the chance he's been waiting for. Could the three of them form some kind of unconventional family—and raise the baby together?
This provocative debut is about what happens at the emotional, messy, vulnerable corners of womanhood that platitudes and good intentions can't reach. Torrey Peters brilliantly and fearlessly navigates the most dangerous taboos around gender, sex, and relationships, gifting us a thrillingly original, witty, and deeply moving novel.
- Print length352 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherOne World
- Publication dateJanuary 12, 2021
- Dimensions6.44 x 1.15 x 9.56 inches
- ISBN-100593133374
- ISBN-13978-0593133378
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From the Publisher
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Detransition, Baby is so good I want to scream.”—Carmen Maria Machado
“This book is exhilaratingly good.”—Jia Tolentino
“An unforgettable portrait of three women, trans and cis, who wrestle with questions of motherhood and family making . . . Detransition, Baby might destroy your book club, but in a good way.”—Andrea Lawlor, author of Paul Takes the Form of a Mortal Girl
“A tale of love, loss, and self-discovery as singular as it is universal, and all the sweeter for it.”—Entertainment Weekly
“It’s the smartest novel I’ve read in ages. I wish I could figure out how it manages to be utterly savage & lacerating while also conveying endlessly expanding compassion. It’s kind of a miracle.”—Garth Greenwell
“If I had the ability to momentarily wipe my memory, I’d use it to reread Detransition, Baby for the first time.”—Vogue
“Even the most complimentary adjectives feel insufficient to describe Torrey Peters’ first novel.”— Bookpage (starred review)
“This emotionally devastating, culturally specific, endlessly intelligent novel is . . . really, really funny.”—Austostraddle
“A fiercely confident novel.”—O: The Oprah Magazine
“With heart and savvy, [Detransition, Baby upends] our traditional, gendered notions of what parenthood can look like.”—The New York Times Book Review
“[Peters] confronts the unruliness of our desires, and our vitality as we struggle within their limits.”—The New Yorker
“[An] electrifying debut . . . a deeply searching novel that resists easy answers.”—Esquire
“Peters’s soap opera-meets-modern-cultural-analysis is witty, emotional, and eye-opening.”—People
“[Peters gets] to the very heart of what it means to exist as a gendered being in the world.”—them
“Funny and gossipy and insightful and cutting and absolutely delicious, all while tackling issues from a lens that has been missing from the literary world for way too long.”—Refinery29
“‘[Detransition, Baby] is going to play a role in defining the literature of 2021 and beyond.”—The Millions
“Plenty of books are good; this book is alive.”—Jordy Rosenberg, author of Confessions of the Fox
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Katrina sits in the roller chair before Ames’s desk. The moment has an air of uncommon inversion. Because she is his boss, Ames nearly always goes to her office and sits in front of her desk. Her office, corresponding to their relative places in the corporate hierarchy, is double the square footage of his, with two full windows looking out on two neighboring buildings, and between them, a sliver of East River view. By contrast, Ames’s office has one window overlooking a small parking lot. Once, in the twilight, he saw a brown creature trotting spritely across the pavement—and has since maintained that it was an urban coyote. One takes one’s excitements where one may.
Katrina rifles through a briefcase, pulls out a manila folder, and plops it on his desk. Her coming to his office makes him tense, like a teenager whose parents have entered his room.
“Well,” she says. “It’s real. This is happening.” He reaches for the folder. He has good posture, and gives her an easy smile. The folder opens to reveal printouts from an online patient portal.
“My gyno,” Katrina says, watching him closely. “She followed up with a blood test and a pelvic exam. She confirmed the home test results. Without an ultrasound, she can’t say how far I am, so I had one scheduled for the Thursday after next. I mean, I know you maybe aren’t sure yet how you feel about it, but maybe if you come, that’ll help? If I’m more than four weeks into it, we’ll be able to see the baby—or I guess, embryo?”
He is aware that she is scrutinizing him for a reaction. He had been unable to give one after the pregnancy test came back positive. He feels the same numbness that he felt then, only now, he can no longer delay by telling her that he wants to wait for official confirmation to get his emotions involved. “Amazing,” he says, and tries out a smile that he fears might be coming off as a grimace. “I guess it’s real! Especially since we have”—he searches briefly for a phrase, and then comes up with one—“an entire dossier of evidence.”
Katrina shifts to cross her legs. She’s wearing casual wedge heels. He always notices her clothing, half out of admiration, and half out of the habit of noting what’s going on in the field of women’s fashion. “Your reaction has been hard to read,” she says carefully. “I don’t know, I thought maybe if you saw it in black and white, I’d be able to gauge how you were actually feeling.” She pauses and swallows. “But I still can’t.” He sees the effort it costs her to muster this level of assertion.
He stands up, walks around the desk, and half sits against it, just in front of her, so his leg is touching hers.
He rotates the printouts, there’s a list of test results, but he can’t make sense of them. His brain shorts out when he cross-references the data that they clearly show—he is a father-to-be—with the data he stores in his heart: He should not be a father.
Three years have passed since Ames stopped taking estrogen. He injected his last dose on Reese’s thirty-second birthday. Reese, his ex, still lives in New York. They haven’t spoken in two years, although he sent her a birthday card last year. He received no response. Throughout their relationship, she had always talked assuredly about how she’d have a kid by age thirty-five. As far as he knows, that hasn’t happened.
It is only now, three years after their breakup, that Ames is able to talk about Reese casually, calling her “my ex” and moving the conversation along without dwelling. Because in truth, he still misses her in a way that talking about her, thinking about her, remains dangerous to indulge in—as an alcoholic can’t think too much about how much she’d really like just one drink. When Ames thinks hard about Reese, he feels abandoned and grows angry, morose, and worst of all, ashamed. Because he has trouble explaining exactly what he still wants from her. For a while he thought it was romance, but his desire has lost any kind of sexual edge. Instead, he misses her in a familial way, in the way he missed and felt betrayed by his birth family when they cut off contact in the early years of his transition. His sense of abandonment plucked at a nerve deeper, more adolescent than that of jilted adult romantic love. Reese hadn’t just been his lover, she’d been something like his mother. She had taught him to be a woman . . . or he’d learned to be a woman with her. She had found him in a plastic state of early development, a second puberty, and she’d molded him to her tastes. And now she was gone, but the imprint of her hands remained, so that he could never forget her.
He hadn’t understood how little sense he made as a person without Reese until after she began to detach from him, until the lack of her became so painful that he started to once again want the armor of masculinity and, somewhat haphazardly, detransitioned to fully suit up in it.
So now, three years have passed living once again in a testosterone-dependent body. Yet even without the shots or pills, Ames had believed that he’d been on androgen-blockers long enough to have atrophied his testicles into permanent sterility. That’s what he told Katrina when they hooked up the first time, the night of the agency’s annual Easter Keg Hunt. He told her that he was sterile—not that he’d been a transsexual woman with atrophied balls.
Product details
- Publisher : One World (January 12, 2021)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 352 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0593133374
- ISBN-13 : 978-0593133378
- Item Weight : 1.3 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.44 x 1.15 x 9.56 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #333,435 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #403 in LGBTQ+ Literary Fiction (Books)
- #6,205 in Women's Domestic Life Fiction
- #18,440 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author
Torrey Peters is the author of Stag Dance and the bestselling novel Detransition, Baby, which won the PEN/Hemingway award for debut fiction and was named one of the 100 Best Books of the 21st Century by the New York Times. Torrey rides a pink motorcycle and splits her time between Brooklyn and an off-grid cabin in Vermont
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book insightful and relatable, exploring transgender issues from a unique perspective. They appreciate the witty writing and art direction. However, opinions differ on the story quality, character development, and writing style. Some find the story engaging and interesting, while others consider it boring or poorly written.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book insightful and relatable. It provides an accessible glimpse into trans relationships and identities. The story is told from a perspective that's not often seen outside of the transgender community. Readers appreciate the different perspectives from the three main characters. Overall, it offers a new and illuminating view on gender roles and what defines family.
"...not my place to do, but based on the writing, the education it can provide cis-gendered people, and the storytelling, it is 5 stars for me...." Read more
"...The subject matter is culturally relevant, and anyone who doesn't have firsthand knowledge about being trans will undoubtedly learn a thing or two..." Read more
"...I appreciated learning about the feelings of trans women as we have a child in our own family who is 15 and is transitioning!" Read more
"...It is a story about self-love, self-hate, the expectations of a cishetero society and how they warp everything they touch and how we crave their..." Read more
Customers find the book relatable and believable. They appreciate the sincere, believable characters and the poignant storyline. The book is described as an engaging, beautifully written romantic novel with candid and raw characters that are unapologetic.
"...They were flawed, and sincere, and above all, believable...." Read more
"...The characters are fully defined and have an authentic(ish) feel. However, they all felt pretty broken, almost unredemptive...." Read more
"...Just be open to it. It's a wonderful book full of terrible, heartfelt, wounding, blissful words and people...." Read more
"...The characters are vibrant, unpredictable, and deeply human...." Read more
Customers enjoy the witty writing style of the book. They find it funny and tender, with insightful takes on issues like womanhood and sexuality. The writing is colorful and has many memorable moments. Overall, readers describe the book as relatable and engaging, with a strong focus on sexuality.
"...Sounds complex, but the stories and anecdotes were told with such a sardonic wit that I really enjoyed the comical elements of the narrative...." Read more
"...The writing was witty and colorful, but I found myself skimming pages towards the end." Read more
"...If this book could keep going, I would keep reading. It’s witty, honest, informative, thrilling, relatable, and has super sex appeal...." Read more
"...The writing style was ok, but the format of the story did not work for me. Also, not much happened...." Read more
Customers enjoy the art direction. They find the imagery vivid and eloquent. The writing is described as bold and thoughtful.
"...The writing is solid. There is a lot of vivid, eloquent imagery. But it can get wordy at times...." Read more
"...The writing was witty and colorful, but I found myself skimming pages towards the end." Read more
"Shockingly candid, unapologetic, and raw characters in an unconventional story. This is a book I love, but would be cautious to recommend...." Read more
"Welp, I started it yesterday and just couldn't put it down. It was exquisite and artful; routinely surprising, relatable, and downright insightful...." Read more
Customers have different views on the story quality. Some find it engaging with an interesting plot and narration. Others describe it as boring, unsatisfying, and lacking excitement.
"Detransition, Baby is one of the most thought-provoking books I've ever read...." Read more
"...However, they all felt pretty broken, almost unredemptive...." Read more
"...The characters are complex and real. The book is a provocative novel that has become one of my favorite reads of the year." Read more
"...The core story is interesting. Ames is a man who transitioned to being a woman and then detransitioned back to living as a man...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the character development. Some find the characters complex and realistic, with current voices. Others find them dislikeable and broken, with broken relationships.
"...The characters are complex and real. The book is a provocative novel that has become one of my favorite reads of the year." Read more
"...The three main characters are fully formed and in transition, in more ways than one...." Read more
"...But broken characters, broken relationships... It's a book with 2 trans protagonists (and one cis woman)...." Read more
"...None of that happens here. The characters are vibrant, unpredictable, and deeply human...." Read more
Customers have different views on the writing quality. Some find it engaging and well-written, with a flowing style that's easy to read. Others mention it gets wordy at times, has a redundant style, and lacks excitement or spark. There are also complaints about poor dialogue and lack of growth in the plot.
"...First, it was the first well-written fiction book I have read in a few months...." Read more
"...However, I gave it 3 stars because it is a well written book that some people might really like. The writing flows and is very readable...." Read more
"...There is a lot of vivid, eloquent imagery. But it can get wordy at times. And I found the frequent time shifts to be distracting...." Read more
"...This is good writing! You should read this book." Read more
Customers have different views on the ending. Some find it unexpected and relatable, while others feel it's ambiguous and abrupt.
"...None of that happens here. The characters are vibrant, unpredictable, and deeply human...." Read more
"...In the end, all I was left with was an ambiguous ending and a strong desire to distance myself from the clinging despair that the book left me..." Read more
"...It was exquisite and artful; routinely surprising, relatable, and downright insightful...." Read more
"Disappointing ending. Hard to remember who was who Then you get but down. Get a flow in. Then it abruptly ends." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on April 6, 2021Detransition, Baby is one of the most thought-provoking books I've ever read. I felt drawn to this book because I wanted to learn more about members of the LGBTQ community. I am a lesbian, but I am also a cis-white woman. This book delivered A LOT of information, much of which I did not have a full grasp on before reading this book. I will not review this book based on the depiction of the trans experience, as that is not my place to do, but based on the writing, the education it can provide cis-gendered people, and the storytelling, it is 5 stars for me.
𝐒𝐲𝐧𝐨𝐩𝐬𝐢𝐬:
Reese is a transsexual woman who thought she was close to having it all; all except a baby. But then her girlfriend Amy, destransitioned to Ames, and their world together came crashing down. Ames enters a relationship with his boss, and when they find out she is pregnant, Ames longs to include Reese in this journey to perhaps create an "unconventional family."
Thoughts:
✨ At first, I was uncomfortable with the word transsexual instead of transgender in this book. I think I've been conditioned that this is not the appropriate terminology and that it is offensive.
Regarding the HIV/AIDS epidemic, the CDC needed an "umbrella" term for "trans" individuals seeking treatment.
"So they assigned a name to this population: the umbrella term "transgender" - and since transgender woman wanted access to recourses, that's what we ended up calling ourselves. But make no mistake, HIV and the invention of transgender women are inextricable. Transgender is the name selected to recognize a vector of disease."
This blew my mind; I had no idea. According to GLAAD, transsexual is NOT an umbrella term but rather a term "preferred by some people who have permanently changed - or seek to change - their bodies through medical interventions, including but not limited to hormones and/or surgeries."
I am so grateful for this knowledge, as it is a reminder that it is ALWAYS important to clarify what term trans individuals identify with.
✨ Detransition, Baby is not a plot-based book. While you are itching to find out what happens with the unborn baby and how the family structure may look, you spend a lot more time learning about Reese and Ames (Amy's) transitions/detransition, their intimate relationship with others, with each other, and most importantly with themselves.
✨ You learn about the WHITE trans community. I really appreciated that Torrey Peters really made it clear throughout the book that the characters were talking about a WHITE trans experience, as trans people of color often have a much different story.
✨What was really special about this book is the exploration of the "detransitioning" invididual. Personally, I do not hear many stories on this topic. As this book illustrates, trans people generally don't support the detransitioning process of one of their peers, as it may confirm to cis-gendered people that they were never trans at all, buffering their "agenda."
I think the following quote explains the experience best:
"I got sick of living as trans. I got to a point where I thought I didn't need to put up with the bullshit of gender in order to satisfy my sense of self. I am trans, but I don't need to do trans."
✨Not only does Peters exploring trans experiences, but also the experience of motherhood, and the rendering around it.
"Motherhood is just some vague test designed to ensure that everyone feels inadequate.”
𝐁𝐨𝐭𝐭𝐨𝐦 𝐥𝐢𝐧𝐞: Torrey Peters lays it all out there. This book will likely make you uncomfortable, make you question your own stereotyping and heteronormative behaviors, your views on gender, sex, and trans individuals. The uncomfortable ride is what makes this book so brilliant and worth it.
TW: There are A LOT in this book.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 2, 2021Written by a trans woman, this book is about three women: Reese, a trans woman living in NYC, Amy, Reese’s ex-girfriend who detransitioned and now is Ames, and Katrina, who got pregnant of Ames.
Katrina does not want to be a single mother, Ames wants to be a parent but can’t commit to be a father because he does not know whether he is going to transition one more time or not. So Ames has a brilliant idea to invite Reese, who desperately wants to be a mother, to their complicated lives, to be a second mother to their child in this queer family arrangement.
Their lives becomes intertwined and the pregnancy brings out suppressed feelings and fears. With this dynamics the author discusses gender, sexuality, parenthood, and social roles. The characters are complex and real. The book is a provocative novel that has become one of my favorite reads of the year.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 18, 2024Detransition, Baby is an extraordinary book.
I feel as if I’ve journeyed to someplace at once alien and familiar. The descriptions of gender politics careened unsparingly across the map of human emotion.
In so many ways, this book maintained that arch, unsentimental impatience I associate with queer life of a certain vintage. Call it Oberlin College, c. 1990s. Now as then, I often felt completely out of my depth. At certain withering take-downs of women, men, or relationships, I’d swear I actually blushed to have been seen so truly. In those moments, I was grateful to be reading it alone; at least there was no witness to my humiliation.
Then with a sudden force, a description would swerve to some place so aching, poetic, and universal it took my breath away.
There was a poetry to the way the author insisted I respect our differences, while demanding I admit our sameness. I found it intoxicating.
I was grateful to get such an intimate window into the minds of these two trans women - and the woman trying so hard to love them. They were flawed, and sincere, and above all, believable. By the end, I realized the book had made them so real that my initial curiosity had become, instead, genuine affection for each of these characters. I will genuinely miss them. Like all of the best books, I know I will turn this story over in my mind, over and over again.
You should read this book. And if you come to a moment - as I did so often at first - where you believe you can’t possibly relate, do yourself a favor. Keep going. I promise, you’ll be so very glad you did.
Top reviews from other countries
- Jay6KReviewed in Canada on December 24, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Galvanizing
Every chapter is trans catharsis. Loooved it. Cried in parts and read it as fast as I could. Want to write my own great trans novel, now.
- Amanda MReviewed in Germany on December 2, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars Intriguing story about queer lives
Reading this book for a queer book club- the characters are all defined, yet obscured, parts of their history and personality and thoughts being revealed through the non-linear telling of the storyline, like an onion being peeled. Details of trans life and society were also hinted at without being overly elaborate for the naive readers.
I am new to realistic fiction (and not super familiar with the intricacies of trans life) but the last two chapters had me gasp and cry multiple times.
- hannahReviewed in the United Kingdom on September 18, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars 5 stars. not as good as that, but nothing like the 1 star reviews either
oh boy, what to say... i thought this was an excellent debut novel, and especially liked the attention to detail, concerning the lifes of transwomen in NYC in the teens and the early 2020s. i thought the 3 main characters had depth, their agencies were realistic, and the baggage they carry felt genuine.
Torrey has admitted that the majority of the situations and scenarios in the novel have evolved from her own experiences with her girlfriends, or friends of friends, and you can see that nuance shine through.
some scenes made me laugh out loud, especially the confusion over Ames' "transition" in the workplace, a wonderful example of oversteer by HR depts nationwide, trying to figure out how best to accomodate (i.e. not get sued) their transgender employees and failing miserably.
terms like 'cis' are used, as well as reference to PrEP, but it never feels like the reader, or one of the characters are preaching or being preached at for not knowning the terminology, and the idea of a collective approach to raising a child is one i'm seeing more and more in cities such as NYC, which seem to be abandoning conservative ideals of motherhood, childcare and identity.
i also liked how the title can be interpreted on multiple levels.
the split narrative structure works, kinda. i feel like it ran out of steam a little on the last 3rd of the story.
on the flipside; i didn't like the ending. it felt apparent that Torrey might not've figured out a satisfactory ending, so we ended up with the ending we got.
the last cutaway to Reece's decision on the boardwalk makes zero sense.
some of Ames' motivations weren't clear. i felt like there's half a chapter missing somewhere.
the "violence against women" slogan being screeched, both here and on other platforms, is present, for about half a chapter, but is being weaponised as a stick to beat Torrey and other transwomen with, courtesy of the TERF brigade, and the other radicals feminazis.
and i find it difficult to equate it to any semblence of reality, when novels like 'Fifty Shades of Grey' are nothing but wall-to-wall violence with similar men, only for these same SWERF & TERF commentators to then fall silent on the subject. so perplexing indeed...
so, final score. 8.5 outta 10.
good description, and a fantastic premise that gets very little love and tons of hate, here in 2021, but falls at the final hurdle. can't wait to read what Torrey writes next!!!
- Kali Kishore RaoReviewed in India on March 17, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Essential Reading
Read to have your self and your soul bettered. Read to laugh and cry. Read to smile. Read to hug it in the end.
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in Australia on July 27, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars excellent read
I found this book to be interesting, fascinating, easy to read, with very rounded characters. It was also enlightening and an all round great read.