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Always Packed for Adventure!

It's the destination and the journey.

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Book Review- Celeste Ng's Our Missing Hearts

We have a few more weeks in the year, but I’m going to call it, Celeste Ng’s Our Missing Hearts was the best fiction that I read in 2022. It’s a heavy, powerhouse of a novel about love, suppression, and art. It’s incredible.

Years in the past, Margaret published a book of poetry that did not have a wide audience. Now, she is married and the mother of a young son. Both Margaret’s life and the world around her have changed dramatically. Approximately a decade earlier, the world suffered through a devastating pandemic and the political climate has shifted. China is the biggest enemy and by extension, asian-americans are deemed suspicious. Patriotism is enforced and those who are suspicious must double-down on their efforts, such as donating to causes supporting an America first agenda. Margaret is asian-american and although she has a subversive, artistic streak, she is trying to keep a low profile for the sake of her family.

Margaret’s world is upended when a group of anti-government rebels takes a line from one of her poems and uses it as their slogan. Soon, Margaret is seeing her line, “Our Missing Hearts” show up in the news and in her own community as an act of rebellion. Knowing that it’s just a matter of time before she becomes implicated, Margaret goes on the run. Her son, whom she affectionately nicknamed, Bird, is left in the dark as to why his mother left. Kids are being taken from homes that are considered anti-American and in an effort to keep Bird with his father, his parents have made a complete split. If the police come, his father will give the story that Margaret is subversive and they have nothing to do with her, no clue as to where she has gone. She is the enemy and they do not talk about her in their household.

Years after Margaret left, a preteen Bird finds a hidden message from his mom and decides to run away to find her. Bird senses that his parents have been lying to him and will risk everything to find out the truth.

Our Missing Hearts is absolutely terrifying, primarily because it feels like it could be foreshadowing a future America. Certainly, there are parallels to our current world with the covid pandemic, the rise is asian hate crimes, and the way some people are viewing patriotism. It certainly doesn’t feel far off from a potential future. In addition to making parents fearful of having their children taken from them, a big aspect of the government control is the banning and restriction of books. Libraries play a large part in Our Missing Hearts, however, they are not functioning quite in the way that we know them. In a clever twist, librarians are acting as an underground information network. Rightly so, they are among the heroes in the story. Artists are also heroes, as they put voice to things that others dare not speak. The climax of the story is quite unexpected, spectacular, and heartbreaking.

Our Missing Hearts is a heavy burden of a book, but an important read. It’s one that will linger with you and would make an excellent choice for book groups. I can imagine that Ng and this book in particular, will end up on banned book lists in the future. It’s sure to set some people off.

tags: Celeste Ng, Our Missing Hearts Book Review, Our Missing Hearts Celeste Ng, Best Books 2022 Our Missing Hearts, Best Fiction 2022 Our Missing Hearts, Banned Authors Celeste Ng, Dystopia Celeste Ng, Dystopia oUR miSSING Hearts, Near Future Fiction, Fiction About Pandemic, Fiction About Patriotism, Fiction About Artists, Fiction About Librarians, Fiction with Adventure Story, Fiction About Absent Parents, Fiction About Racism, Fiction with Asian Characters, Asian Hate Crimes, Fiction about poets, Margaret Our Missing Hearts, Bird our Missing Hearts, Art as Activism, Bookseller Recommends, Books like Handmaids tale, Good book Club Picks 2022
categories: Book Review, Read
Saturday 12.17.22
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

Book Review- Celeste Ng's Everything I Never Told You

Prior to my summer vacation, I went book shopping at Vroman's and Celeste Ng's novel, Everything I Never Told You, caught my eye. I read it during our cruise and I donated my copy to the library on Royal Caribbean International's Explorer of the Seas. The library on the ship only had two shelves of books and the space was mostly used as a hangout for wayward teenagers. It was very pitiful. Future cruisers, bring books to leave and reclaim the quiet space!

PLOT - Set in the 1970's, Everything I Never Told You, kicks off with the death of high school student, Lydia Lee. Lydia went missing and has turned up in a nearby lake, apparently the victim of a drowning, although foul play has not been ruled out. Ng's story is told in a close third person perspective, drifting from Lydia's family members, as they all come to terms with her death and try to understand her life. 

LIKE - The element of Ng's story that really popped for me was the way that she used perspective. As a writer, I sometimes find perspective to be a challenge and Ng handles this masterfully. The story floats between various characters and the distance is constantly rushing forward and pulling back. This works so well with both the theme of water and the idea of never truly knowing another person. Lydia is a character that puts on a different mask for each person that she knows, making for extremes in the way that each character perceives her and tries to make sense of her death. Thematically, Everything I Never Told You, reminds me very much of one of my favorite novels, Jeffrey Eugenides' The Virgin Suicides. 

Ng's story is layered with other themes that add to the complexity. Lydia and her siblings are half Caucasian and half Chinese living in a suburban community in America in the 1970's. They struggle with both their identity and fitting in with the kids in their community. Lydia's mother grapples with giving up her career dreams to raise a family and as a result, she pushes all of her aspirations on an unwilling Lydia. The members of the Lee family are all living very private and isolated lives beneath the surface, as they try keeping up the facade of being a happy family.

DISLIKE- Nothing. This is a complex and fascinating story that is beautifully written by Ng.

RECOMMEND- Absolutely! Everything I Never Told You is an affecting read ( although, maybe a little dark for a vacation pick!) and I look forward to future efforts by Ng. 

tags: Celeste Ng, Celeste Ng Everything I Never Told You Book Review, Lydia Lee Character, Vromans Bookstore Pasadena, Royal Caribbean Explorer of the Seas Southhampton, Royal Caribbean Explorer of the Seas Library, Cruise Ship Libraries, Like Jeffrey Eugenides The Virgin Suicides, Mix-Race in America 1970's, Books Set in the 1970's, Books with Drownings, Close Third Perspective, Cruise Tips
categories: Read
Friday 07.24.15
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

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