Nuclear family A novel

Joseph Han

Book - 2022

"Mr. and Mrs. Cho run a successful chain of Hawai'ian plate lunch restaurants, and their adult children are finding their way in the world: 21-year-old Grace is graduating in a few months, and 25-year-old Jacob is teaching English in Seoul. They're set to take over the restaurants when Umma and Appa retire. But when Jacob is captured by the South Korean government for attempting to run across the DMZ, the Chos' peaceful lives are shattered. What could possess Jacob to do something so stupid? The Chos don't know that Jacob has been literally possessed by his wily grandfather's ghost, don't know that Jacob is hiding his bisexuality and confusion over his identity as a Korean-American; they don't know th...at Grace is constantly stoned and plotting her escape from the island and her family's expectations. The children don't know the burdens of their immigrant parents. Joseph Han draws from Korean myth to explore the generational trauma experienced by families shattered by partition, and the impacts of American imperialism on the Korean peninsula. Nuclear Family is a spectacular debut novel--at once devastating and hilarious--about the memories that bind and divide families, and the yearning for home"--

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Subjects
Genres
Humorous fiction
Gay fiction
Domestic fiction
Ghost stories
Magic realist fiction
Published
Berkeley, California : Counterpoint 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Joseph Han (author)
Edition
First hardcover edition
Physical Description
299 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781640094864
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Grace, 21, and Jacob, 25, are Korean Hawaiian on their father's side (three Cho generations are currently islanders); maternally, they are both South and North Korean, with their closest Jeong relatives in Seoul. College senior Grace lives at home and works at their parents' Cho's Delicatessen. Jacob recently moved to Korea to teach English, allowing him to reunite with extended family he hasn't seen since childhood--his mother's older sister, his other grandmother, and, well, his estranged late grandfather. Tae-woo is hungry, lonely, and desperate to return to North Korea, but he's trapped "by the politics of the living and the laws of the dead," unable to cross back home. Possessing, strengthening, and controlling his grandson's body could be his only chance. Images of what seem to be Jacob's attempt to traverse the DMZ get blasted back home, where even the faraway hint of North Korean connection causes havoc in the Chos' lives. Vandalism happens, customers dwindle, roaches appear; meanwhile, Grace approaches addiction. Tragic, funny, and strikingly ingenious, Han's prodigious debut is a spectacular achievement. Seamlessly dovetailed into his sublime multigenerational saga are pivotal history lessons, anti-colonial denunciations, political slaps. For Korean speakers, Han's brilliant linguistic acrobatics will prove particularly enlightening (Jeong is a homophone for jeong, something akin to empathic connection) and shrewdly entertaining.

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

Han makes a smashing debut with this stunning take on identity and migration told through the multiple perspectives of a Korean American family. The story centers on Jacob Cho, who, while teaching English in South Korea, makes international headlines after attempting and failing to cross into North Korea. It turns out, though, that Jacob was possessed by the ghost of his dead grandfather, Baik Tae-woo. While Jacob is interrogated by South Korean authorities and struggles to understand what's going on, his parents and younger sister, Grace, living in Honolulu, deal with the resulting fallout at their Korean plate lunch restaurant, which loses business and suffers from vandalism due to rumors about them possibly being North Korean spies. Grace, a senior in college, suffers from panic attacks and gets frequently stoned after Jacob's incident, and the ghost of Baik Tae-woo is revealed to be a trickster who got Jacob to help him cross the border in order to return to the family he'd abandoned during the Korean War. The family members contend with why Jacob and Grace's mother moved the family to Hawaii from Korea, and what drove Jacob away. Each short chapter takes readers deep into the heart of each character's dilemmas, and while it's heartbreaking, it's also sharply hilarious, as with a description of television host Guy Fieri, whose airbrushed imprimatur radiates from behind the Chos' counter: "he who has risen from flame decals, born by accident when his Camaro crashed into the Food Network." This is a master class from a brilliant new voice. (June)

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Review by Library Journal Review

DEBUT Set in the author's home state of Hawai'i, this debut novel takes place prior to the 2018 false alarm when a nuclear missile alert was issued throughout the state. Here, readers meet the Cho family, purveyors of a chain called Cho's Delicatessen, which offers Korean-style plate lunches. The business was boosted after being featured on a program with Guy Fieri. The Cho's daughter, Grace, loves smoking cannabis--some of her passages sound like "Harold & Kumar" with a Hawaiian food flair. Grace is finishing her final year of college and regularly helps her parents run the business. Their son Jacob, who's teaching English in South Korea, is suddenly possessed by his grandfather's ghost on a visit to the DMZ, the demilitarized area that acts as a buffer between North and South Korea, but he crosses that zone and gets shot in the process. The ghost wants to find family left behind in the north, but when news of the incident spreads, patronage of the family's business dries up as loyal customers suspect the family of being spies with ties to North Korea. VERDICT Han successfully depicts the love binding the Cho family and the struggles they face, and themes of unity, assimilation, and acceptance run deep, whether it be for the country of Korea, the people of Hawai'i, or humankind more generally. Filled with campy humor, Han's novel will be appreciated by readers looking for a light, fun, yet meaningful read.--Shirley Quan

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

An immigrant family is haunted by the past. Korean-born Han sets his debut novel in Hawaii in 2018, in the months leading up to a false alert of an impending missile attack from North Korea. Central to his tale are Mr. and Mrs. Cho, ambitious Korean immigrants who successfully run a popular plate-lunch restaurant they dream of turning into a chain in hopes that their two grown children, Grace and Jacob, will take over someday. The siblings, though, have other plans: Grace, perpetually (and tediously) stoned, wants "to get off this rock, strap an Acme rocket on her back [and] land in grad school as far away as she [can] get." Jacob, who is gay, doesn't see himself as his mother does: "her representative and living proof, her healthy and tall son, of how well they were doing." When he decides to travel to South Korea to teach English and discover something of his heritage, his parents are delighted, but soon they learn devastating news: Jacob has been arrested for trying to breach the Demilitarized Zone. Back in Hawaii, gossip spreads quickly, the family is shunned, and the restaurant struggles. Jacob, though, is no spy; unwillingly and unwittingly, he has been inhabited by his dead grandfather, who desperately wants to find the family he left behind when he fled North Korea. The ghost sees Jacob as "merely a vessel for his wishes, like how all sons, and grandsons, ought to be." Excited at being embodied, he is intent on making up "for an afterlife of starvation." Jacob's efforts to extricate himself from his selfish "spiritual tumor"--even seeking help from a domineering shaman--test both his strength and hold on reality. Han's surreal fantasy, sometimes devolving into slapstick, contains a serious critique: of the marginalization of Korean immigrants; of the plight of families separated by a politically contrived border; of shattered lives, pain, and guilt. A raucous and adroit debut. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.