Great books this month, and great variety!
→ THE DEATH AND LIFE OF AUGUST SWEENEY by Samuel Ashworth: August Sweeney was a celebrated chef, famed for his restaurants and TV shows, and after a life lived to excess, he's dead at 52. He stipulated that his body be fully autopsied so that everything possible could be learned from it or put to use, just as he'd use every part of a butchered animal in his kitchen. In alternating chapters, August's autopsy is performed and his life story plays out. The pathologist, Dr. Maya Zhu, is as skilled at and devoted to understanding bodies as August was to appreciating food. In the course of the autopsy, her work is interrupted by the intrusion of elements from her own life story.
Ashworth pulls off this unusual concept with great skill. To research the novel, he spent time in restaurant kitchens and an autopsy lab, and the story is packed with fascinating detail. Much of that detail is about the inner workings and dismantling of bodies, both animal and human, so this is absolutely not a book for everyone. But I appreciated how much I learned in the course of the story, and I appreciated how imagery from these fields is used to describe everything: "New York is like the human liver, brilliant at absorbing toxins, forever sloughing off the dead cells of failure and re-growing thriving new tissue in its place." There's a compelling energy to the writing, the characters, and the plot. I recommend this novel to everyone who can stomach it.
→ MỸ DOCUMENTS by Kevin Nguyen opens with the story of how Ursula's grandmother got her family out of Vietnam and to America after the fall of Saigon, and Ursula's discovery that there's a darker truth behind the story. Ursula, a budding journalist, is learning how to uncover and shape the truth into stories, though in her uninspiring first media job, her beat is beauty products. Ursula's brother is also starting his first real job as an intern at Google. Their younger half-sister (the siblings were all abandoned by the same father) is a first-year college student in New York City, where she expected to see Ursula more often. All these exciting futures are interrupted when coordinated terror attacks are committed by Vietnamese perpetrators. In response, the US government incarcerates Vietnamese-Americans into remote camps, cutting them off from contact with the outside world. Ursula and her brother, who have a white mother, escape internment. In the face of the country's apathetic acceptance of the situation, they try to figure out what they can do, as a journalist and a tech worker. Their half-sister and brother are shipped off to a camp somewhere in a desert, where surprisingly quickly, the prisoners adapt to the new normal, and their young lives continue through the usual milestones. In time, opportunities arise to fight back from within the confines of the camp.
Nguyen grounds this story deeply in the experiences of each sibling, to great effect. As the novel explores the details of the horrific premise, the recognizable absurdities of young people fumbling into adulthood makes it even more chillingly plausible. The characters are portrayed with wonderful specificity, and I cared about them, laughed with them, and was frequently infuriated by their flaws and choices. The narrative moves along quickly, switching between characters and building up the tension of how their actions will affect each other. This is an excellent, complex story about characters figuring themselves and their family members out in the middle of a terrible time.
→ WHERE PEACE IS LOST by Valerie Valdes: Kel has been living for years on an isolated planet, where she's avoided getting close to anyone because she doesn't want to reveal the facts of her past and the reasons the Prixori Anocracy empire might be after her. Then one of the empire's abandoned war machines is mysteriously activated and begins lumbering across the peaceful planet, threatening lives and ecosystems. Kel knows she might be the only one with the power to stop it, but two strangers land on the planet and claim they can handle the problem. Their motives are unclear, and as Kel is still deciding whether she can afford to get involved, a naively eager young neighbor volunteers them both to guide the offworlders to the machine. The four set off on the treacherous journey, harboring various secrets and suspicions.
It took me some time to get into this story, but then I became absorbed in the characters and their undertaking. I think I would have connected with Kel sooner if her often-alluded-to past had been explained earlier so I understood what was at stake. (Oddly, the book's marketing copy includes details that aren't revealed until halfway through.) The dynamics between the characters are depicted well and evolve believably over the course of the novel. The worldbuilding is strong, and while the events of this novel are confined to a single planet, Valdes has sketched out a whole galaxy with the potential for more stories. If adventures in this universe continue, I'll read on.
→ WRITERS & LOVERS by Lily King: Casey is a writer who's been working on her novel for six years. She writes in the mornings before her exhausting job waiting tables at a high-end restaurant. Losing herself in both endeavors lets her temporarily escape the grief of her mother's recent death. Casey makes an unexpected romantic connection with a guy who's also a writer. And then she falls into a relationship with a second one, adding even more uncertainty to her future.
As the title suggests, this novel is mostly about writing and love, but it also includes many interesting sections about restaurant work, a topic that lends itself better to concrete description than the other two. The story is set in 1997, so there are a lot of (sigh) period-accurate details, especially about how communication worked way back then, with Casey receiving calls from the men on the restaurant's phone line and mailing manuscripts at the post office. I enjoyed reading about all these things (especially the writing struggles!) and spending time with Casey and the other characters. I hoped the plot would have a bit more oomph, and I was surprised it all ended so tidily, in contrast to King's EUPHORIA, which I liked more.
Good Stuff Out There:
→ Lincoln Michel discusses plot as a story element and the principles of plot escalation: "Eschewing plot because you dislike formulaic stories is like renouncing character because you dislike stock figures and stereotypes. If a plot is too rigid and the hand of the author too overt, that's bad writing. It isn't the fault of plot per se. The idea that plot is in opposition to innovative, experimental, or strange fiction is perhaps even backwards. A strong plot can be a sturdy foundation that allows you to build weirder and wilder structures, akin to how avant-garde painters use traditional subjects (like still lifes or portraits) as springboards to new styles."