An unambitious young woman struggles to cope with the impending loss of the giant, mutated Pacific octopus she cares for.
Ro is going through a brutal, albeit unique, breakup: Her longtime boyfriend, Tae, has left her to join a crew that will colonize Mars. Her only solace is taking care of Dolores, an octopus warped to giant size and given extended life by the “Bering Vortex,” an agglomeration of chemicals that have turned the Bering Strait into a sort of toxic laboratory filled with “six-finned salmon [and] winged cod.” Ro is stuck in the past; she works at the same mall aquarium her father did before he disappeared on a research trip into the Bering Vortex when Ro was a teenager. He brought the octopus back from a previous expedition, and Ro is devastated to learn that Dolores will soon be sold to a wealthy collector, the cousin of the Mars mission’s benefactor. All this has the makings of a science fiction mystery or a climate novel, but Chung has instead opted to write an adult bildungsroman, a grappling with childhood’s traumas and the tricky process of maturation in the 21st century. Much of the novel is told in flashback. Ro’s parents are Korean immigrants, and there was serious tension between her aloof scientist father and her uptight mother, who longed for the country she was raised in. In the present, Ro binge-drinks and blows off texts from her mom and her best friend. In fact, Ro has a drunken driving habit, one that endangers her life and the lives of others, but this is just presented as a symptom of her immaturity. The real problem is that she’s lonely, Chung suggests. At a disastrous dinner with her mother, Ro is offered this advice from her mother’s new boyfriend: “It’s not good to be alone for too long, you know.”
A debut novel of change, community, and cephalopods.