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76 pages 2 hours read

Lisa Jewell

The Family Upstairs

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2019

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Themes

The Lasting Effects of Trauma

The four children living in the Chelsea house in the late 1980s and early 1990s—Henry, Lucy, Phin, and Clemency—endure immense trauma. Once David Thomsen becomes the self-appointed leader of the house, he implements harmful rules, such as forbidding the children to go outside, underfeeding them, and locking them in their bedrooms as punishment. This trauma affects the characters well into adulthood. As an adult, the truth of Lucy’s past “jangled at her nerves, squeezed at her stomach muscles, played drums on her heart, taunted her in her dreams, sickened her when she awoke, and kept her from sleeping when she closed her eyes at night” (222). This quote indicates the extent of Lucy’s trauma, and how it even affects her physical health as an adult.

Reflecting on his own trauma, Henry acknowledges that oftentimes people don’t realize the extent of their trauma while they are experiencing it. It’s easy to look back and say how things should have gone differently, but by the time Henry and the other children had been living under David’s watch for several years, they’d become accustomed to his mistreatment of them. As an adult, Henry reflects on the time David locked him in his bedroom as punishment.

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