Close Menu
Pop Icon Magazine
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Pop Icon Magazine
    • Home
    • Celebrity News
    • Movies
    • Television
    • Music
    • Books
    • Fashion & Style
    • Horror
    • Cover Story
    • Contact us
      • About us
      • Amazon Disclaimer
      • DMCA / Copyrights Disclaimer
      • Privacy Policy
      • Terms and Conditions
    Pop Icon Magazine
    Home»Books»Emily LaBarge on Trauma Writing and Trauma Reading
    Books

    Emily LaBarge on Trauma Writing and Trauma Reading

    AdminBy AdminMay 22, 2026
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp
    Emily LaBarge on Trauma Writing and Trauma Reading

    Dog Days by Emily LaBarge



    “In her memoir, “Dog Days,” LaBarge challenges the idea that writing a ‘trauma narrative’ is an act of healing, portraying it instead as a messy unravelling with her experimental and unique prose.”

    It’s often assumed that to write a good memoir, a writer must have something happen to them. Something big, juicy, and traumatic. Something unbelievable that really happened to you. Emily LaBarge is here to critique this idea.

    In her memoir, Dog Days, LaBarge challenges the idea that writing a ‘trauma narrative’ is an act of healing, portraying it instead as a messy unravelling with her experimental and unique prose.

    Dismantling the ‘Good Story’

    LaBarge is a writer, an art and literary critic, and she did experience something very traumatic. She and her family were held hostage for hours by six men who broke into their tropical rental house while they were on vacation one Christmas. No one was injured, but LaBarge finds her thoughts return to that experience often, haunting her. Instead of giving us the full story, LaBarge gives us the reality of what it’s like to live through and write about trauma.

    Dog Days’ disorienting narrative deals with the difficulty of piecing together into a cohesive narrative and how easy it is to overanalyze and shift your story to fit into the widely accepted studies and stories of traumas, large and small. Referring to her experience as ‘It’ or the ‘Good Story,’ she demonstrates how her trauma seems to take on a life of its own. How it wants to be told, but she is dreadfully unsure of how to tell it. She faces the temptation to shape her lived experience into a ‘Good Story,’ a story that fits into the reality that both trauma writers and trauma readers want.

    Trauma As…

    LaBarge’s narrative style brings an unsettling anxiety to this experience. The narrative voice resembles a hyper-vigilant consciousness. It becomes increasingly disorienting as every topic bleeds into the next.

    She explores trauma and memory, trauma as a trend, the psychology of trauma, and, most of all, trauma as a narrative. This exploration catalogs her spiraling response. It’s how she sleeps, how she writes, how she perceives time and space. And it’s not just how she does these things; she then goes further, analyzing how sleep, writing, time and space have been experienced scientifically and artistically, in studies, in books, in research and in art.

    As a result, Dog Days becomes less of a memoir, instead resembling something between a cultural criticism, an essay and an account of LaBarge’s experience unpacking and writing this book.

    We Are What We Consume

    In dancing around the ‘Good Story,’ LaBarge’s memoir ends up a sharp critique of how much we have normalized, even glamorized trauma. What happened to LaBarge’s family, what really happened to them, is akin to images we see every day on TV and in movies, what we read about in thriller books and listen to on True Crime podcasts. No one ever thinks these things will happen to them. No one thinks these things really happen. It’s all a little hard to believe. LaBarge shows that when it does happen to you, it’s even harder to believe. The truth and the memories become fuzzy.

    LaBarge connects her story to the trauma stories of others. Using studies and research, as well as the experiences and words of writers like Sylvia Plath, Joan Didion, Maggie Nelson and Carmen Maria Machado, she deciphers how she feels through the lens of how others have felt before.

    I felt one of the most fascinating elements of Dog Days was how much it demonstrated that when we read or consume anything, it becomes a part of us. It inevitably shapes the narrative we give to our lives and how we understand and perceive our own world. LaBarge’s critiques build on each other in this stream-of-consciousness narrative style, and alongside her, we try to decipher meaning from all that we see and have experienced.

    Ultimately, this memoir is not a trauma narrative. It is instead about how impossible it is to form an authentic narrative around a traumatic event. It is a narrative informed by how we build and shape our lives into a narrative. About how we write about our own lives. And about how we find meaning within our own stories and within ourselves.

    Dog Days by Emily LaBarge

    Publish Date: May 19, 2026

    Genre: Memoir

    Author: Emily LaBarge

    Page Count: 280 pages

    Publisher: Transit Books

    ISBN: 979-8893380477

    Originally Published Here.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp
    Previous ArticleWho Is NASCAR Driver Kyle Busch’s Wife? Meet Samantha Busch
    Next Article Angine de Poitrine’s 2026 Tour: How to Get Tickets

    Related Posts

    Interview with Daniel Ellrick, Author of Mars Colony Rescue

    May 22, 2026

    HR 2616, a National “Don’t Say Trans” Bill, Passed the House. Here’s What It Is and What You Can Do.

    May 21, 2026

    Energy, Consciousness and a Lyrical Search for the Soul

    May 21, 2026

    New Mystery and Thriller Books to Read | May 19

    May 20, 2026

    The 100 Best Novels of All Time… Supposedly

    May 20, 2026

    Leonie Swann’s Wickedly Inventive Farewell to Agnes Sharp

    May 19, 2026
    Popular Posts

    Revival Trailer Previews Clive Barker’s Latest Nightmare

    Movies

    Barbra Streisand Cancels Major Appearance Amid Health Concerns

    Television

    Stephen Colbert Joins David Byrne for Performance of “Burning Down the House”

    Music

    New Mystery and Thriller Books to Read | May 19

    Books

    Lindsie Chrisley Plans to Stay Celibate for an Entire Year

    Celebrity News

    John Cena & Eric André Netflix Movie Little Brother Gets Hilarious Trailer

    Movies

    ‘AI’ Hannah Harper Makes Country Debut With Carrie Underwood

    Television
    Music

    Pearl Jam Returning To Action At Ohana Festival

    Music

    Bloc Party New Album Anatomy of a Brief Romance Announced with First Single

    Music

    Gracie Abrams’ Third Album Coming In July

    Music

    Dua Lipa Sues Samsung for $15 Million

    Music

    Tame Impala Welcomes Dua Lipa In London

    Music
    Categories
    • Books (2,835)
    • Celebrity News (2,629)
    • Cover Story (46)
    • Fashion & Style (2,119)
    • Horror (2,873)
    • Movies (3,256)
    • Music (3,707)
    • Politics (3)
    • Television (2,966)
    Movies

    Don’t Forget, Henry Cavill’s New Action Movie Releases This Week

    Movies

    Masters of the Universe Gets a Worrying Box Office Forecast

    Movies

    Star Wars Boss Gives Hopeful Answer on Ahsoka Ending After Season 2

    Movies

    Affection Director BT Meza Explains Why Horror Movie’s Big Twist Happens Early

    Movies

    Kevin Hart’s Unique Netflix Special Streams Live Today

    Movies
    Horror

    Send Help Review – Sam Raimi Is Back In Fine Splatstick Form

    Horror

    The Bloodiest And Most Disgusting Segments

    Horror

    ‘Attack of the Killer Tomatoes: Organic Intelligence’ Teaser Previews USS Midway Museum Screening

    Horror

    ‘Lenskeeper’ Trailer – Lovecraft Meets Fulci Meets Barker in Cosmic Horror Film

    Horror

    ‘Repo! The Genetic Opera’ 4K Release in the Works

    Horror
    Archives
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit TikTok
    © 2026 Pop Icon Magazine. All rights reserved. All articles, images, product names, logos, and brands are property of their respective owners. All company, product and service names used in this website are for identification purposes only. Use of these names, logos, and brands does not imply endorsement unless specified. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.