Amanda Boyden’s “I Got the Dog” Is a Fierce, Funny Account of Marriage to a Fraud

Amanda Boyden’s “I Got the Dog” Is a Fierce, Funny Account of Marriage to a Fraud

Novelist Amanda Boyden’s searing new book I Got the Dog: A Memoir of Rising is roaring up the Canadian bestsellers list.


Born in Minnesota and educated at the University of New Orleans, Boyden has done everything from slinging hash to performing as a trapeze artist known as “Lady Hummingbird.”

She’s published bestselling novels – Pretty Little Dirty (Vintage – 2006) and Babylon Rolling (Pantheon – 2008) – before embarking on her memoir. Dog offers the reader – among other things – a devastatingly powerful account of a sexual assault as well as the psychic assault of a marriage gone desperately wrong.

Skinny Jackson recently had a virtual sit-down with Boyden and discussed everything from Shakespeare to writing to betrayals of the heart – and how, when life kicks you in the teeth, you get back up and get back to it.

You have a successful career as a novelist, why a memoir at this point in your career?

I’d been bouncing around for a number of years, working primarily on screenplays and adaptations, a bit of journalism here and there, and a requested collection of poems for a dying friend.

I also had two novels-in-progress (both finalists in the William Faulkner – William Wisdom Competition) but, after the break-up of my marriage, I simply couldn’t find the stomach to return to pre-existing work. No doubt I was craving something new at large, but I’d also considered the Me Too movement as a motivating force to tell my story, part of it from a long time ago, part of it recent.

Over the decades I’ve found great solace in the words of others – Joan Didion’s The Year of Magical Thinking comes to mind – and I wanted to offer something helpful or possibly useful rather than just consuming the works of other people.

I’m just gonna jump in here and ask you flat-out. Your ex-husband – Joseph Boyden – was the literary darling of Canada – perhaps a tad too darling, darling. Yet there’s not a lot of mudslinging in I Got the Dog. You remain above the fray. Should we call you High-Ground Boyden?

I thought a lot about what I wanted to say and how I wanted to say it. Am I still trying to heal? Some weeks, yes. Other weeks I’m still reeling. I found out just a few days ago that a woman I considered a friend – a former graduate student of mine – had had a two-year affair with Joseph, right under my nose.

There may be more cockroaches in the corners that come my way, but they can be killed with a good shoe swat.

Life is short. I don’t want to be on any kind of crusade that reminds me every day of the dark side of the human condition. Why sully my memoir with vindictiveness.

Agreed, Sister. Now I’m going to head into some tough questions if that’s okay.

I’ve got my big girl pants on and zero reason not to say what I know to be true.

Alright then, here it comes. Your ex, Mr. Boyden, has been accused by the media – and some in the First Nations communities – with misrepresenting himself. It’s been argued that he has no Native Canadian blood whatsoever and casually invented an indigenous literary identity in order to sell books. Is that true?

Here’s what I know: I was a fierce defender of my husband when the controversy broke out, as I knew him to be passionate, truly passionate, about the First Nations’ causes he supported. I believed that he had the people and the cause in his blood, his mind, and his heart. I believed he meant the words he put down on paper and the words he said in public when telling the history and the stories of the First Nations people.

That said, I urged him to get out in front of the firestorm of controversy thatThe Globe and Mail feature generated about his claim to his status. And I was troubled by his response. He dragged his feet and stalled on taking a DNA test for a long, long time before finally doing it.

But he finally took the test?

[LONG PAUSE] Yes, he did.

Joseph BoydenCanadian Author, Joseph Boyden

And what were the results?

While he has a few drops of indigenous blood from overseas . . . that would be Greenland, he has no Native American blood, has no DNA that can be traced to the First Nations people in Canada or the Americas at large.

Wait. So you’re saying he made the whole thing up?

I actually don’t believe that he was solely responsible for the mythology of the Great Joseph Boyden. Years and years ago, when the machine began spinning his myth-story for his dust jacket it included the word Metis, I asked him why he’d let them say that.

He categorically didn’t know that could be the case about his heritage but explained that the word Metis meant “mixed,” and that he didn’t fully know his genetic history.

I called him out on the false advertising, but he ignored my advice. He did that about other aspects of his life as well – ignoring my advice, that is.

You can buy I Got the Dog on Amazon here.

How do you feel about that?

I Got the Dogrecounts how Joseph told me he was “just going to live [his] own life.” I didn’t exactly understand what that meant at the time. But now the onus is on him.

I don’t feel like a woman scorned. I feel like a woman freed. I feel like a woman vindicated. I’m sure many more women who drank his Kool-Aid, women he had one-night stands with – or significantly longer relationships with inside our marriage – will reveal themselves to me.

But as R.E.M.’s lyrics say, finally, “It’s the end of the world as we know it, and I feel fine.”

Thank you for being so honest. Time to breathe – take a sip of wine. Or four. Now tell me, do you see any connections between your novels and your new book?

I’d be lying if I said I’m not a feminist. All over this memoir, I try to touch on that, especially in the chapter titled “Marrow.” We three daughters, being the children of our smart and independent parents who instilled those feminist values in us, well, we’re all feminists.

Both Pretty Little Dirty, a reinterpretation of the Cupid and Psyche myth, and Babylon Rolling address feminism. As a writing woman, how can I not champion Woman with a capital W?

How would you describe I Got the Dog and its intent?

Full of fire, tears, joy, immense pain, glorious heights. If I can rise, so can you.

What’s at the heart of the book?

That one version of me who is most vulnerable.

I think about all the other women and girls – so many of color – the LGBTQ+ community – and feel like I might just have managed to carve out the tiniest path in this world for others who find themselves sad. Or self-punishing. Or wandering.

One of my favorite people – not just in the book, but ever – is your younger sister Meg who is a psychic medium. I can tell she’s a real hero to you. Are you Meg’s hero, too?

Funny you should ask that. A couple days ago I was on a conference call with Meg and a friend. Afterward, the friend said, “Wait, I thought she was your younger sister.” I laughed and said yes, she’s younger in this life but a much older soul.

Meg is indeed my hero, and her husband is as good a man as it gets. I admire their union, their solidarity, their moxie, their loyalty not just to one another but to extended family.

Any discoveries made while writing I Got the Dog – are you surprised by anything?

I was admittedly delighted by abandoning old forms and just letting the material draw me into new narrative territories. Why did I have to write this in any semblance of a traditional memoir? I just decided to write freely. After all, I was newly free.

When did you know you were a writer?

Before I could write. Mom sang German lullabies and read me fantastical bedtime stories. Dad made Shakespeare jump and sing. Their world was always about words, and they brought me into it from Day One. I was gifted with amazing parents.

Amanda Boyden with the dogAmanda Boyden with the dog

You can buy I Got the Dog on Amazon here.

What’s next for you?

I’m finally heading back into a novel that’s held my interest for years. It’s about an illegal immigrant, a kidnapped girl, a 95 year-old WWII vet, a jilted African American wife, as well as a serial killer and his sublimated wife. Yeah, there’s a reason why I’ve dragged out the writing of this thing . . .

Any favorite memoirs?

Michelle Obama’s Becoming, The Girl with the Lower Back Tattoo by Amy Schumer, Laurie Gough’s travel memoir Kiss the Sunset Pig. Countless others.

What books are you currently reading?

I just finished a collection of stories that I think will soon be essential reading in all university classes. Michael Clayton’s Dead Roosters is absolutely fantastic. My dad’s book of poetry is also knocking my socks off: In Their Time, by Bill Buege.

With an unforgettable title like I Got the Dog, I gotta ask about your rescue Chihuahua, Fry.

He and I are sporting our COVID-10 Tires – Fry’s is a ten-ounce, mine a ten-pounder. But we wear them proudly. After all, we’re both survivors.

You can buy I Got the Dog on Amazon here.

Amanda Boyden is the author of two novels, Pretty Little Dirty and the international bestseller Babylon Rolling. Her short fiction and nonfiction have appeared in Maclean’s, Globe and Mail, Sonora Review, and others. The recipient of Nerve.com’s Henry Miller Award for Best Literary Sex Scene in Pretty Little Dirty, she lives in New Orleans with her rescue Chihuahua, Fry.

AC “Skinny” Jackson is a music entrepreneur and working journalist who understands what it means to be on the right side of the tracks.

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