Danny’s narration in The Dutch House is filtered through decades of memory, demonstrating how a person’s understanding of their past is not an objective reality but an ever-shifting, reconstructed story. Early in the novel, Danny recalls the first time he met Andrea, his eventual stepmother: “I will always believe that Andrea’s face fell for an instant when she looked at Maeve and me.” The phrasing, “I will always believe,” indicates that Danny’s memory is less a record of fact than a story he clings to because it confirms what he already feels: that Andrea disliked him and Maeve from the moment they met. This pattern recurs throughout the novel, as he and Maeve make sense of their past through the stories they tell each other. These stories reinforce their resentment toward Andrea and their sense of loss regarding the Dutch House.
The siblings’ fixation on the Dutch House becomes its own form of inheritance. Even after Andrea exiles them, they return year after year to sit outside, as if keeping watch over what was taken from them. Even though they do not inherit the house in a legal sense, they inherit its psychological weight and perpetuate cycles of abandonment and neglect. For instance, Danny, like Cyril before him, buries himself in work rather than confronting the fractures in his marriage. Elna, too, repeats patterns of abandonment, believing her self-sacrifice for strangers in need justifies the pain she inflicted on her own family by leaving them.
By the novel’s end, Danny’s daughter May inherits the Dutch House, but rather than becoming trapped by the lure of nostalgia as her father and especially her aunt once were, she breathes new life—new memories—into it. The novel argues that inheritance is both material and psychological. Grudges, misunderstandings, and other emotional debts, the novel shows, accumulate over time and are passed down, just like wealth or property. But May’s ability to move beyond the earlier generations’ cycles of hurt and abandonment suggests that there is always a choice to break the cycle.
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past ThemeTracker
Memory, Inheritance, and the Past Quotes in The Dutch House
Chapter 1 Quotes
Though the story will be remembered that Maeve and Andrea were at odds right from the start, that wasn’t true. Maeve was perfectly fair and polite when they met, and she remained fair and polite until doing so was no longer possible.
Because I was fifteen and generally an idiot, I thought that the feeling of home I was experiencing had to do with the car and where it was parked, instead of attributing it wholly and gratefully to my sister.
Chapter 2 Quotes
“That’s the strike you have against you. A boy grows up rich like you, never wanting for anything, never being hungry”—he shook his head, as if it had been a disappointing choice I’d made—“I don’t know how a person overcomes a thing like that. You can watch these people all you want and see what it’s been like for them, but that’s not the same thing as living it yourself.”
After Maeve came home from the hospital things got worse. Logic said our mother’s absence had made her sick, and so logic concluded that further talk of our mother could kill her. The Dutch House grew quiet.
Chapter 4 Quotes
“Do you think it’s possible to ever see the past as it actually was?” I asked my sister. We were sitting in her car, parked in front of the Dutch House in the broad daylight of early summer. The linden trees kept us from seeing anything except the linden trees. […]
“I see the past as it actually was,” Maeve said. She was looking at the trees.
Chapter 5 Quotes
Then I remembered what my father had told me, that the things we could do nothing about were best put out of our minds. I gave it a try and found that it was easier than I imagined.
Chapter 6 Quotes
More than school or the basketball court, more than the Dutch House, I was at home on a building site. [...] I loved being part of a building being made.
The truth was we had come this far and had never given Andrea a thought. Our cruelty became the story: not our father’s death but how we had excluded her from it.
He had protected me from the world so completely that I had no idea what the world was capable of. I had never thought about him as a child. I had never asked him about the war. I had only seen him as my father, and as my father I had judged him.
Chapter 8 Quotes
I would have loved to have evidence more irrefutable than my own memory, since neither my sister nor my wife would back me on this: it was Maeve who had picked out Celeste, and it was Maeve that Celeste first loved.
Chapter 9 Quotes
And so throughout my interminable academic career I suppressed my nature. I did everything that was required of me while keeping a furtive list of the buildings I passed that were for sale: asking price, selling price, weeks on the market.
Chapter 12 Quotes
“Believe me, I know what a bad time everyone went through. I was there. But your mother has a higher calling than we do, that’s all.”
Chapter 14 Quotes
The fact that we were parked there now was really just an act of nostalgia, not for the people we’d been when we lived in the house, but for the people we’d been when we parked on VanHoebeek Street for hours, smoking cigarettes.
Chapter 15 Quotes
There was nothing extraordinary about her. She was a woman I had known in my childhood and now did not know at all, a woman who had, for several years, been married to our father.
We had made a fetish out of our misfortune, fallen in love with it. I was sickened to realize we’d kept it going for so long, not that we had decided to stop.
Chapter 16 Quotes
“You went to India to get away from the house?” Of course it wasn’t just the house or the husband. There were the two children sleeping on the second floor who went unmentioned.
My mother’s pale eyes were clouded by cataracts and I wondered how much she could see. “What else could it have been?”
“I guess I just assumed it was Dad.”
“I loved your father,” she said. The words were right there. She didn’t have to reach for them at all. I loved your father.
Chapter 17 Quotes
Maeve was happy and tired and utterly unlike herself. She didn’t talk about her work at Otterson’s, or what she needed to do for me [...] She sat on the couch and let our mother bring her toast. There was no distance between them, no recrimination. They were living together in their own paradise of memory.
“I’ve wanted my mother back since I was ten years old, and now she’s here. I can use the time I’ve got to be furious, or I can feel like the luckiest person in the world.”
“Those are the two choices?” I wished we could get in the car and drive over to the Dutch House, just sit by ourselves for a minute even though we didn’t do that anymore.
Chapter 18 Quotes
In my dreams, the intervening years were never kind to the Dutch House. I was certain it would have become something shabby in my absence, the peeling and threadbare remains of grandeur, when in fact nothing of the sort had happened. The house looked the same as it did when we walked out thirty years before.
My mother and sister went to the fireplace to stand beneath the VanHoebeeks.
“I hated them,” my mother said quietly, still holding Andrea’s shoes.
Maeve nodded, her eyes on those eyes that had followed us throughout our youth. “I loved them.”
Chapter 20 Quotes
“Hi, Andrea,” I said. No anger could survive this, at least no anger I’d ever had. Andrea was as small as a child.
We stood there in the grass, watching the young people fluttering in and out of the windows—moths to the light. “My god, I love this so much,” May said.
“It’s your house.”



