In this debut novel set in China, two generations struggle with the consequences of ambition and the difficult search for belonging.
In 2007, Alva is 14 and living in Shanghai, the daughter of a white American mother and a Chinese father she never knew. In 1985, Lu Fang is a young adult in the port city of Qingdao. Weaving between the perspectives of these two characters, the novel is a complex and moving exploration of race, class, gender, and family. Alva struggles to find her way in the world after her mother marries Lu Fang, now their rich landlord. She occupies herself with “wimpy mutinies” both at home and at school while scheming to enter the Shanghai American School, whose glossy advertisements are filled with smiling multiracial children and tidy grounds. When she meets Zoey, a “proper American teenager,” she feels irresistibly drawn to her new friend's family, with their live-in maid and summers in the Hamptons. They seem like the family she’s always wanted, but her relationship with them risks exposing the shadows of their life—and perhaps of the American Dream itself. Back in the '80s, Lu Fang is struggling to make sense of his own life as a shipyard clerk with a pregnant wife, having suffered the loss of his boyhood dream of becoming an international businessman. One day while swimming, he meets a golden-haired American woman who inspires him to reevaluate his life—the consequences of which will reverberate for years to come. Following the economic and cultural undulations of 1980s China and the precursors of what will eventually become the Great Recession, this novel examines the price people must pay when financial—and personal—debts come due.
An ambitious, innovative take on both the immigrant and coming-of-age novel.