The border of paradise A novel

Esmé Weijun Wang

Book - 2016

"In booming postwar Brooklyn, young David Nowak cannot fit in. His family, a pillar of the Polish immigrant community, is at a loss to help their boy, who is obsessive, neurotic and wracked by insomnia. After inheriting control of the family fortune while still in high school, David abandons life in New York to travel the world. His return to the U.S. with Daisy, a young Taiwanese woman, marks an irreparable break with his past. Escaping to the Northern California wilderness, the newlyweds craft an insular, often idyllic existence for their two children, William and Gillian. But while modern life threatens to lure the children away, it is the looming madness of their parents, and its shocking legacy, that will decide their fate."-...-Page [4] of cover.

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Subjects
Published
Los Angeles, CA : The Unnamed Press [2016]
Language
English
Main Author
Esmé Weijun Wang (author)
Physical Description
290 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781939419699
Contents unavailable.
Review by Library Journal Review

Growing up in postwar Brooklyn, David wholeheartedly believes everything his immigrant Polish parents say about their Novak Piano Company: the pianos are important not just to the world of music but to America itself. He's also enchanted by beautiful Marianne Pawlowski when she sings at their house, but their engagement is broken off; David's incipient mental illness emerges after he sells the company he inherits as an adolescent, and his life flounders over decades. Though readers know from the beginning that David will commit suicide, his decline is heartbreaking. VERDICT A well-wrought multigenerational novel that also appeals for its honest look at mental illness. © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A grievous unhappiness rakes across this novel about the slow self-destruction of the isolated Nowak family. Wang's debut begins with a suicidal David Nowak's reminiscences of his mid-20th-century childhood, which raises ghosts of Henry Roth's Call It Sleep, both in style and in the self-flagellating obsessions of a neurotic boy. He spends his Brooklyn youth deep in a self-hatred from which he is occasionally rescued by his fixation on a neighbor girl, the lovely and innocent Marianne. When his father's sudden death leads to the hapless David's decision to sell the piano company he has inherited, Marianne abandons him under the pressure of her family's disdain, and so begins the series of events that becomes the death-seeking spiral that forms this novel. Not yet 20, David aimlessly lets his wealth take him to Taiwan, where he meets a bold bar girl named Jia-Hui Chen, whose "sappy, sloppy girlishness" makes his "nerves squirm with delight." David and the girl he renames Daisy alternate telling the story of the early years of their marriage, "hemorrhaging money" in California. Daisy's voice is brash and matter-of-fact, a welcome relief from David's morose, confessional detailing of his progressive madness. Eventually they hole up in a valley in the Sierras, "a place of brambling woods and mining shafts." Penned in first by David's aloofness and then by Daisy's growing paranoia, the Nowaks' world shrinks and becomes increasingly eccentric. When their overly obedient teenage son William picks up the narrative, his voice is an exact echo of his father's. So is his obsessive love for pubescent girls. Wang's deeply uncomfortable and somber novel is soaked with bizarre details, yet only in its final movements does the pace shift from static and entrapping to horrifically propulsive as the distant hope of escape glimmers. More focused on psychology than plot, Wang's novel remains extraordinarily unresolved, with sudden brutalities that send the story haring toward an unexpected, abrupt ending.Gothic in tone, epic in ambition, and creepy in spades. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.