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A MAP FOR THE MISSING by Belinda Huijuan Tang

A MAP FOR THE MISSING

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by Belinda Huijuan Tang

Pub Date: Aug. 9th, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-593-30066-4
Publisher: Penguin Press

This ambitious debut novel finds a math professor returning from the United States to his native China on a pilgrimage of multigenerational discovery.

Themes of family and forgiveness against the sweep of political foment inform this epic, which opens in the U.S. but spends the rest of its pages in China, hopping between the mid-1970s and 1993. The earlier period represents the formative years of Tang Yitian, a bookish boy from a rural farm family who frequently finds himself at odds with his brusque father. The later marks Yitian’s belated return to his homeland following a frantic call from his mother informing him that his father has disappeared after having walked away from home without explanation more than a decade earlier. In between, there is much for Yitian to discover, and the reader as well, as the novel seems to underscore the adage that to understand all is to forgive all. What requires understanding is the death of Yitian's older brother, as well as their grandfather, over the course of a year; the tension between that grandfather and Yitian's father; and the transition for Yitian from toiling in the fields to studying at an urban university, falling in love in the process. All this occurs within the turmoil in China during the Cultural Revolution and its aftermath. Having left all this behind when he immigrated to America for graduate studies, married to a woman who provides some stability, Yitian must balance the identity he has forged and life he has found with the one he left behind. Through returning to China and searching for his father, he discovers so much more.

There’s a lot to absorb, but the narrative momentum keeps the reader engaged.