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THE ORIGINAL DAUGHTER by Jemimah Wei

THE ORIGINAL DAUGHTER

by Jemimah Wei

Pub Date: May 6th, 2025
ISBN: 9780385551014
Publisher: Doubleday

In Singapore in 2015, Genevieve Yang Si Qi’s terminally ill mother has one last request—to see her two daughters together again.

Genevieve—who narrates the story—refuses to reach out to her estranged sister, Arin Yang Yan Mei, feeling that to honor her mother’s request would be to betray herself. With deep and often poetic insight, the novel goes on to chart the sisters' relationship over the past 20 years. Unlike many siblings, Arin arrives fully formed when Genevieve is 8 and she's just a bit younger; it turns out that Genevieve's grandfather, who disappeared years ago and has only just died, had a whole secret family and Arin was his granddaughter. The girls are close as children, with Genevieve playing the protective, comforting older sister as Arin struggles to find a place for herself in the family and the world at large. As their talents and interests diverge, however, the two girls gradually and then more quickly grow apart. As much as Genevieve loves Arin, she begins to wonder if her increasing distance is what fuels her sister’s success as an actor—if her absence from her sister’s life “unclipped her wings” and finally allowed her to thrive. As Genevieve watches the film that promises to be Arin’s breakout role, however, she discovers a betrayal that threatens to undermine the women’s relationship forever. Wei's novel glistens with often profound insights about the complicated relationship between a person's identity and the dynamic forces of family and friendship, with Genevieve remarking at one point: “How vast the legion of unrealized, contradictory, impractical ghosts crammed within each mortal body was.” The first half of the novel is much stronger than the second, in which the plot machinations can feel somewhat forced. Though Genevieve is someone for whom violence “bloomed like desire,” her motives sometimes come across as thinly disguised plot devices more than organic outgrowths of a fully fleshed-out character.

A moving debut novel about sisterhood, ambition, and the quest to become one’s true self.