Cover Image: First Comes Love

First Comes Love

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Thanks so much to Bloomsbury for letting me read First Comes Love by Tom Rasmussen. It's a queer-focused book about marriage written by a non-binary author, and I was really intrigued to see the institution of marriage dissected under a very modern lens. But I disagreed a lot with this book. The main opinion differences for me was the presumption that people just sink into marriage and monogamy without thinking about it (I think marriage is pretty pointless but I think most people do have legitimate reasons); that monogamy is almost the boring or conformist choice, rather than what feels natural for the most people, both straight and queer; and that marriage is, at the very best, a semi-bad choice because of all its history (in my opinion, anyway, institutions are there to be co-opted for the future). Tom's generalised statements about working-class people's attitudes to marriage also differed very much from my own experience, but that's their experience so I can't quibble! I'm not going to give this a star rating as disagreeing with an author's perfectly legitimate opinions is not enough to warrant a mediocre review - and, in any case, I really like Tom's writing, peppered with both humour and thoughtfulness, and I really enjoyed the chapter on divorce and the final evocation of long-term love as being in the small, boring, everyday things. A thought-provoking read, definitely and one I'd recommend if you're looking to interrogate marriage from a different perspective than is normally seen in the media.

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Thanks to Bloomsbury and NetGalley for an e-ARC of this book.

I read the author's other book - Diary of a Drag Queen - last year and was really looking forward to this book. It definitely delivered.

The book is part memoir, part interview, part discussion piece and it talks about what marriage - traditionally a heterosexual construct - might mean nowadays not only to the straights, but also to LGBT+ people, non binary people and polyamorous relationships. There are plenty of interviews with people from across the sexuality and gender spectrums that showed how marriage was or wasn't something they felt able to engage with.

The author has a dilemma in that they come from a background where all their friends and family are or are getting married and they kind of want to marry their boyfriend, but at the same time they don't want to buy into an institution that has traditionally has been exclusionary and just generally not great for anyone who isn't a cishet dude.

The author has such a sharp turn of phrase - I loved it. Even though at times there was some repetition as to his dilemma ('I want to get married. But I don't believe in marriage. But I want to get married.') the text never felt stale.

I think they key audience would be anyone who doesn't place as cishet on the gender/sexuality spectrum, but really I'd recommend this for anyone.

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I really enjoyed this, it's a bit of a deep dive into all the questions no one really seems to ask about marriage, all from a queer perspective. The assimilation of queer people into the very capitalist, heteronormative (and previously racist and classist) idyll of marriage is something I am skeptical of, and this definitely validated a lot of that point of view while also acknowledging that this socialisation/ritual can also be very important to people. The author manages to relate to everyone's view of marriage - they're a non-binary drag queen who grew up religious and are still a little bit wed to the idea - and I thought that was a really great and empathetic angle to approach this subject from, given how personal it can be.

The conversation around whether assimilating some queerness will leave other, less "acceptable" queers behind vs. queering marriage from inside the convention is interesting, and I enjoyed the interviews with people doing the latter with open or polyamorous marriages. I also loved the chapter on divorce, I know truly nothing about it, and it astounded me how expensive it can be and how even nowadays people can be trapped in marriages simply because they don't have the financial means to get out of them. The concept of marriage as stability goes out the window in those kinds of situations, and they're really not talked about enough.

This book explores both the legal and structural aspects of marriage alongside the personal, social and emotional aspects, weddings vs. marriage and the idea of love as performance for an audience and much more. It's also written engagingly and is very funny, I would recommend picking it up if you too have Many Complex Thoughts about marriage, if only to know that someone else is asking those questions too.

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This was a fresh and welcome take on marriage. From early childhood perceptions, media/tv portrayals, friends takes and everything else in between. Honest, fresh and very modern. My favourite bit was the Sex & The City section, was envious and intrigued. Interesting read.

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First Comes Love is an exploration of modern marriage, not-marriage, and everything in between, considering how it relates to sexuality and class and gender and what marriage really means to people. Tom Rasmussen considers their own relationship, what it's like going to weddings as a non-binary person, and how various queer (and straight) friends and acquaintances relate or don't relate to marriage, as the book takes a journey through what marriage might be currently and whether it is all it's cracked up to be.

Part-personal memoir/essay and part-discussion of marriage history and interviews with other people, this book provides an interesting look at what marriage might mean to different people, including open marriages, polyamorous relationships, and people who choose not to get married. Written by a non-binary author, the book also looks at the history of equal marriage, what it means, and briefly touches on where it falls down (trans people face huge difficulties with marriage, especially if they want to be seen as the right gender in the eyes of the law when getting married or transition whilst married).

The look at less traditional relationships will probably be a selling point for many people picking up the book (it was for me) and even better than hearing different people's stories is hearing from Rasmussen about their own thought processes around marriage, and how these thoughts intersect with class and queerness. The book doesn't have a simple answer about marriage and its pros and cons, or whether it is still necessary (though some of the legal protections might suggests sometimes it is, and other times it gets in the way of other areas of life), and that feels important, perhaps opening some readers' eyes to really consider what the point of getting married is. The closing chapter is particularly powerful, a consideration of the need for an audience looking at your own relationships and how lockdown changed this, raising the question of if marriage is focused on what other people see, rather than your own private relationship.

If there's anything I would've liked more of, it would've been a bit more of a look at asexuality and relationships that wasn't about someone who married a ghost (there is one other mention of asexuality I think, but partly about the author being confused about it), though as this isn't something the author personally has experience of I can see how it doesn't fit so well into their journey.

I've never read a book about marriage before (I was drawn to this one by the author and the fact they look at varied ways of being together) and this book doesn't need you to have thought about it much (or, alternatively, you might've thought about marriage a lot): it explores people's experiences (obviously, it can only fit in so many) and also one person's journey to consider what marriage might mean to them. Ultimately, it's a sweet look at how varied relationships can be and an interesting exploration of what marriage is in the modern day.

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