The unpassing

Chia-Chia Lin, 1981-

Book - 2019

A searing debut novel that explores community, identity, and the myth of the American dream through an immigrant family in Alaska In Chia-Chia Lin's debut novel, The Unpassing , we meet a Taiwanese immigrant family of six struggling to make ends meet on the outskirts of Anchorage, Alaska. The father, hardworking but beaten down, is employed as a plumber and repairman, while the mother, a loving, strong-willed, and unpredictably emotional matriarch, holds the house together. When ten-year-old Gavin contracts meningitis at school, he falls into a deep, nearly fatal coma. He wakes up a week later to learn that his little sister Ruby was infected, too. She did not survive. Routine takes over for the grieving family: the siblings care for e...ach other as they befriend a neighboring family and explore the woods; distance grows between the parents as they deal with their loss separately. But things spiral when the father, increasingly guilt ridden after Ruby's death, is sued for not properly installing a septic tank, which results in grave harm to a little boy. In the ensuing chaos, what really happened to Ruby finally emerges. With flowing prose that evokes the terrifying beauty of the Alaskan wilderness, Lin explores the fallout after the loss of a child and the way in which a family is forced to grieve in a place that doesn't yet feel like home. Emotionally raw and subtly suspenseful, The Unpassing is a deeply felt family saga that dismisses the American dream for a harsher, but ultimately more profound, reality.

Saved in:
Subjects
Genres
Domestic fiction
Published
New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Chia-Chia Lin, 1981- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
278 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780374279363
Contents unavailable.
Review by New York Times Review

throughout Chia-Chia Lin's somber debut novel, about the muffled anguish of a Taiwaneseimmigrant family struggling to adapt to the Alaskan wilderness amid the recent death of their youngest child, questions of home persist. A theme so timeless as to suggest a certain stolid permanence, this vagueness of home inspires even as it eludes members of a single household, creating a familiar world within an unfamiliar land, a country that is simultaneously everywhere and nowhere. The challenge for the narrator (and, to a certain extent, the reader) becomes how to reconcile the static "unpassing" of memories and identities, despite the exposure of time. Set within a Lorelei-like rural landscape 30 miles outside Anchorage in the 1980s, "The Unpassing" is narrated by the Taiwanese-born Gavin, whose family brought him to this peripheral expanse of America on the edge of the Pacific when he was 3. Trawling through a vast ocean of memories years later, Gavin revisits the period when, at 10 years old, he contracted meningitis, fell into a coma and was hospitalized. Once recovered, he learned of his little sister's fate - she was infected, too, but did not survive. The tragedy inevitably magnifies unspoken tensions in the already struggling immigrant family, which are heightened further when subpar work by Gavin's plumber father (he was an engineer in Taiwan) results in the fatal poisoning of a young boy. Gavin's search for a lost geographical and spiritual center underscores his longing for an idealized past from the fragmented present. Peering from the forbidding Alaskan wilderness just beyond the cultivated security of his family's yard at one point, he says: "In the woods, it was darker and stiller, and I streaked through it all. I wasn't heading home, though I suppose I was. There was always just this one path, headed one way. I had no choice, really; I was always headed home." Later, when his younger brother loses his way in the forest during an especially stormy evening, Gavin explains: "The truth was, we didn't know the woods at all. We only knew the path. Once you stepped off of it, there was no telling what you'd find." As Susan Sontag has written, "to remember is to voice - to cast memories into language - and is, always, a form of address." This raises an obvious question: To whom is Lin's deracinated narrator addressing his homesick telling and retelling of his family's history? Strikingly, the only character who remains unnamed throughout the novel is Gavin's mother, who represents both his origin and the implied endpoint of his trip down memory lane. Although discomfiting and unreliable, memories promise comfort and self-discovery, and it is hardly coincidental that an adult Gavin returns to his birthplace in search of home: "I went to Taiwan, trying to find the village that lived in my memory of my mother's memory." But he comes to realize his relationship to the place is ambiguous, both distinctly of it and separate from it. It is a hard-won, elegiac truth about an unsalvageable past, this Sebaldian secondhand memory, the eventual recognition that he cannot step into the same river twice, which he presages at the very beginning of his narrative: "Although we tried, each in our own way, no one was able to go back even one step." Wisdom in hindsight is, after all, one of maturity's age-old graces. If the novel seems unrelentingly cheerless at times, its tone reflects Gavin's struggle to come to terms with his family's particular history of displacement and loss. Immigrants, just like Joseph Brodsky's exiled writers, are often "retrospective and retroactive beings." Nevertheless, Gavin's articulation of his family's circumstances bears the inexorable imprint of an American collective memory that is variously functional and symbolic. Punctuating his thoughts are neither contemporary Taiwanese nor Asian cultural references, but rather the Space Shuttle Challenger explosion, Time magazine and the Exxon Valdez oil spill off the Alaskan coast. His mottled identity creates familial strains: Disappointed with his visit to Taiwan, Gavin remonstrates: "It was a kind of violence, what my father had done. He had brought us to a place we didn't belong, and taken us from a place we did. Now we yearned for all places and found peace in none." For all of its pathos, its themes of cross-cultural intermingling, its stories of immigrant arrival, marginalization and eventual accommodation, "The Unpassing" is a singularly vast and captivating novel, beautifully written in free-flowing prose that quietly disarms with its intermittent moments of poetic idiosyncrasy. But what makes Lin's novel such an important book is the extent to which it probes America's mythmaking about itself, which can just as easily unmake as it can uplift. Before he revisits Taiwan, Gavin heads back to his Alaskan house - his father's old dream. "My father ... fancied himself some kind of pioneer," he reflects, but "the expanse made him totally unfettered. The distance stripped his words. There was no self-consciousness, only sentiment." If the United States is merely an idea that it forms of itself, then let the nostalgic among us be warned: We may be longing to return to a time that no longer exists - or perhaps never did. Immigrants, just like Joseph Brodsky's exiled writers, tire often 'retrospective and retroactive beings.' BRIAN haman is the book review and interview editor of The Shanghai Literary Review.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [June 9, 2019]
Review by Booklist Review

Lin's stunning debut novel opens with a recollection: Gavin remembers that once when he was little, his mother feigned death just to see how her children would react. This vignette is like a prophecy. Pages later, an 11-year old Gavin becomes sick and, upon waking, learns that one of his sisters has died from the same illness. Bookended by adult Gavin's search for a sense of belonging, The Unpassing is the story of a Taiwanese family dealing with grief and guilt in 1980s Alaska. With powerful and poetic prose, Lin captures the uncertainty and insight of childhood. Gavin observes his teenage sister try to assimilate, adopting the name Paige instead of Pei-Pei, and his little brother, Natty, desperately search for their lost sister, even mistaking the squirrels that live in their attic for her ghost. Meanwhile, their parents grow increasingly estranged, and as their anger fills the house, Gavin, Pei-Pei, and Natty retreat into the surrounding woods. Enchanting and mysterious, Alaska's trees, wind, and water seem always on the verge of eating them up, until finally the landscape nearly does. Lin's majestic writing immerses the reader in the bodily experience of her characters, who writhe, paw, dig, salivate, and draw readers into their world.--Maggie Taft Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In Lin's challenging debut, set in rural 1986 Alaska, a Taiwanese-American family struggles to cope with the loss of their youngest member. A week after the Challenger explodes, 10-year-old Gavin wakes up from a meningitis-induced coma, only to realize that his younger sister, Ruby, didn't survive the illness. In the months that follow, the family slowly disintegrates. When not fighting with her husband, Gavin's mother talks incessantly about taking their remaining three children and moving back to Taiwan. Gavin's father, a water well driller, becomes despondent and erratic, staring into space or sawing holes in the ceiling to squelch a flying squirrel infestation. When he's sued by a white family whose child became severely ill from an improperly installed water well, the ill-equipped and penniless parents run from the situation. They take the children and go on a "vacation" in the Alaskan boonies, forcing Gavin, his five-year-old brother, Natty, and their older sister, Pei-Pei, to sleep in the truck with the rest of their scavenged belongings. Upon their return to the repossessed house, the family squats in the eerie, empty shell as winter sets in-that is, until yet another catastrophe shatters the little they have left. The unrelenting bleakness of the novel might be too much for some readers, but Lin's talent for vivid, laser-sharp prose-especially when describing Alaska's stark beauty or the family's eccentric temperament-is undeniable. (May) Correction: this review incorrectly stated a character had died. © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Kirkus Book Review

In this debut novel, a Taiwanese-American family 30 miles outside Anchorage struggles to live after the death of their youngest daughter.Ten-year-old Gavin loses consciousness after he comes home from school sick, the day before the Challenger launch is broadcast on TV. When he comes to a few days later, his world has been wrenched apart: Every astronaut on the shuttle is deadand so is his 4-year-old sister, Ruby, who contracted meningitis from him. Immediately, Gavin is saturated with a guilt he doesn't know how to express: "The heaviness on me was like dread. But what came after dread? What was on the other side of it, once a thing was done, done, and done, and dread had thickened into something solid?" His other family members, including 5-year-old brother Natty and older sister Pei-Pei, treat each other with a quiet kind of violence, and the rift between his parents expands. His mother wants the family to move back to Taiwan, where she and his father grew up; his dad, an insubstantial man who drills water wells and repairs septic tanks, maintains his innocence when sued by a family whose child was poisoned by a well he worked on. The lawsuit, grasped only hazily by the children, threatens to drain the family's savings and evict them from their home. The novel is full of harsh beauty, both in its prose and its attentive depictions of an ever shifting Alaskan environment, all frigid air and Sitka spruces and vast, treacherous mudflats. Death is omnipresent, from a tree that nearly falls on Pei-Pei to the flying squirrel skeletons the family clears from their attic, as well as a sense of constant, oppressive emptiness. "It was impossible to erase the feeling of the unoccupied parking spaces around us. So many freshly painted rectangles and no cars. To one side was an empty building, to the other, empty roads." The book's main mood is one of intense suffocation: Gavin's family is completely unable to communicate, and events pile up, disjointed and without explanation. The family doesn't belong, the novel makes achingly, physically explicit: not to the community, where they stick out because of their race and lack of money, and not to the land, which is unwelcoming to any form of life.Unremittingly bleak. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.