The Unpassing: A Novel
The Unpassing: A Novel book cover

The Unpassing: A Novel

Hardcover – May 7, 2019

Price
$16.96
Format
Hardcover
Pages
288
Publisher
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0374279363
Dimensions
5.54 x 1.02 x 7.74 inches
Weight
14.2 ounces

Description

"For all of its pathos, its themes of cross-cultural intermingling, its stories of immigrant arrival, marginalization and eventual accommodation, “The Unpassing” is a singularly vast and captivating novel, beautifully written in free-flowing prose that quietly disarms with its intermittent moments of poetic idiosyncrasy. But what makes Lin’s novel such an important book is the extent to which it probes America’s mythmaking about itself, which can just as easily unmake as it can uplift." -- Brian Haman, The New York Times Book Review "Lin’s attention to detail is startling, and though she keeps close to Gavin’s childhood experience, she also allows us to read between the lines and intuit the depth of the family’s grief, financial straits and fear of belittlement from their white neighbors and colleagues. Anyone who has ever grieved ― be it the loss of a person, home, country or security ― will feel a sense of recognition. The Unpassing is a remarkable, unflinching debut." -- Ilana Masad, The Washington Post "An arresting portrait of an immigrant family’s pivotal moment of crisis . . . a nuanced portrayal of the American frontier . . . Lin’s spare, lyric prose sets an elemental stage, a place indifferent to human suffering, cycling through life and death on a larger scale . . . The Unpassing is a powerful debut from an author to watch." -- K.B. Thors, San Francisco Chronicle "[A] grim, breathtakingly beautiful debut novel . . . Lin excels when she gets small, with finely observed renderings of the family’s surroundings . . . The way this chilling, captivating book concludes will delight as much as it challenges, offering as it does a blend of escape, tragedy, triumph, loss and what we’ve expected all along." -- Nathan Deuel, Los Angeles Times "Harrowing . . . In lyrical, intimate prose, Lin reveals the harsh realities of working class life in 1980s Alaska and the failed promises of the American dream." -- Thomas Gebremedhin, The Wall Street Journal Magazine "The trope of the absent child often casts a grim shadow over our literary landscape but rarely with the acute psychological insights of Chia-Chia Lin’s poised debut, The Unpassing . . . The bleakness here is redeemed by Lin’s honesty and honed craft, her masterful evocation of the Last Frontier . . . The Unpassing is the work of a mature artist, an eloquent, unsparing testament to the vicissitudes of our lives, how love can plunge us into the brutal cold of a long Arctic night." -- Hamilton Cain, Minneapolis Star Tribune "What The Unpassing does is so brutal yet intensely immersive that questioning Lin’s choices feels like asking for a novel far less authentic . . . It’s brutal, but marvelous. The prose is so sparse that it feels designed to describe Alaska, and Alaska alone." -- Kamil Ashan, The A.V. Club ("A" rating) " In graceful, precise language, Lin captures the details of the Alaskan wilderness and the family’s despair as they avoid talking about what’s tearing them apart." -- TIME "A quietly dramatic novel that captures the confusion of childhood and the hazy quality of memory while depicting a family struggling to build a home in a harsh place . . . The novel perfectly conveys the loneliness of being in a family: the paradox of the ties that inextricably bind us together despite our never truly understanding the people we call kin . . . Lin’s novel doesn’t offer any conclusive answer, because she is interested in something between knowing and not knowing. Narrating from that gap, she gives us a haunting story all its own." -- Larissa Pham, The Nation "In this spare, deeply felt debut novel, Lin resists received wisdom about the American dream to craft a family saga about the difficulty of grieving far from home." -- Adrienne Westenfeld, Esquire " The Unpassing took me a while to get through, but not because I was bored. Because every single sentence was stunning . . . This isn't a page-turner. It's a full on page-savorer." -- Mehera Bonner, Cosmopolitan (Best Books of May) "A complicated and refreshingly unromantic family drama . . .One of the immediate pleasures of Lin’s writing is the heightened perception it brings to [its] environments . . . At its heart, The Unpassing is about newcomers striving in the margins between civilization and the forest for a basic sense of security that others have long taken for granted. It’s a kind of modern pioneer story, stripped of sentimentality but pulsating with both love and dread for the wilderness." -- Charles Black, Outside "Chia-Chia Lin is heartbreakingly attuned to the nuance and depth of the children’s perspectives, and Gavin’s narration reflects an acute sensitivity to his family’s emotional weather. Her prose is unadorned but luminous, distilled to potent precision . . . I loved the richness layered across every page, and I still find it hard to believe this novel is a debut." -- Alex Madison, Longreads "Lin’s evocative passages and brilliantly observed details place the reader in a landscape rendered at turns foreboding or desolate by the family’s calamities. There is much to savor in her deft ability to conjure atmosphere." -- YZ Chin, Electric Literature "Haunting . . . the amount of heaviness shouldn’t be a deterrent in undertaking the subtle world of wonder to be uncovered inside Lin’s affecting novel . . . The Unpassing gives an affecting focus on showing its readers how children understand and process loneliness . . . The Unpassing is heartbreaking and painful but so is life in those moments when we suffer. Lin’s novel knows this more than most." -- Bradley Sides, Chicago Review of Books "Stunning . . . With powerful and poetic prose, Lin captures the uncertainty and insight of childhood . . . Lin's majestic writing immerses the reader in the bodily experiences of her characters, who writhe, paw, dig, salivate, and draw readers into their world." -- Maggie Taft, Booklist (starred review) "Lin’s talent for vivid, laser-sharp prose―especially when describing Alaska’s stark beauty or the family’s eccentric temperament―is undeniable." -- Kirkus “I can’t stop thinking about The Unpassing . Chia-Chia Lin captures the strangeness and beauty of childhood better than any writer in recent memory, and she is a brilliant observer of physical and emotional landscapes. Readers should be excited: this debut novel, a true work of art, displays the kind of clear and uniquely-angled vision that announces the beginning of a remarkable career.” ―Jamel Brinkley, author of A Lucky Man " The Unpassing is a breathtaking novel, full of characters as strong and as wild as the Alaskan landscape they inhabit. Sentence after gorgeous sentence, I was pulled into their eery and beautiful world. Chia-Chia Lin is a remarkable writer." ― Yaa Gyasi, author of Homegoing “Like the landscape it inhabits, this brilliant novel is composed of equal parts mystery, menace, and ravishment. It’s difficult to think of another recent book in which emotion mounts so steadily and inexorably, nearly imperceptibly, until the last pages arrive with almost unbearable force. Chia-Chia Lin is among the best new writers I’ve read in years.” ― Garth Greenwell, author of What Belongs to You “Chia-Chia Lin’s The Unpassing is a searing, open wound of a book, marvelously alive and, quite simply, remarkable. Traversing the oftentimes brutal frontier of an isolated family living in an isolated environment, I can’t think of another novel as of late that relentlessly tackles headlong our deepest struggles for a sense of place, of home, and belonging. How do we push through grief? How do we find peace with not only our loved ones but ourselves? What sacrifices must we endure for friendship and connection? This is a story for our times. And a story unlike any other.” ―Paul Yoon, author of The Mountain " The Unpassing is a devastating debut, igneous, aching as if with the glow of the great northern skies beneath which it is set. More than meditation on grief; more than immigrant saga, or bildungsroman; more than new American gothic: here, Chia-Chia Lin has written a novel of such strange, brittle beauty as to resemble nothing else so much as living, itself. Her prose―at once poetic and lucid, by turns darkly comic and haunting―achieves something like the peculiar grammar of loss. I turned the last page with heartache and wonder, a feeling of having been undone and remade." ―D. Wystan Owen, author of Other People's Love Affairs Chia-Chia Lin is a graduate of Harvard College and the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. Her stories have appeared in The Paris Review and other journals. She lives in the San Francisco Bay Area. The Unpassing is her first novel.

Features & Highlights

  • Finalist for the 2019 NBCC John Leonard Prize for Best First Book.
  • Shortlisted for the Center for Fiction's First Novel Prize. One of
  • Entertainment Weekly
  • 's 10 Best Debut Novels of 2019.
  • Named one of the Best Books of 2019 by
  • TIME
  • ,
  • The Washington Post
  • , and
  • Esquire.
  • A
  • New York Times Book Review
  • Editors' Choice.
  • "A singularly vast and captivating novel . . . What makes Lin’s novel such an important book is the extent to which it probes America’s mythmaking about itself." --
  • The New York Times Book Review
  • A searing debut novel that explores community, identity, and the myth of the American dream through an immigrant family in Alaska
  • In Chia-Chia Lin’s debut novel,
  • The Unpassing
  • , we meet a Taiwanese immigrant family of six struggling to make ends meet on the outskirts of Anchorage, Alaska. The father, hardworking but beaten down, is employed as a plumber and repairman, while the mother, a loving, strong-willed, and unpredictably emotional matriarch, holds the house together. When ten-year-old Gavin contracts meningitis at school, he falls into a deep, nearly fatal coma. He wakes up a week later to learn that his little sister Ruby was infected, too. She did not survive. Routine takes over for the grieving family: the siblings care for each other as they befriend a neighboring family and explore the woods; distance grows between the parents as they deal with their loss separately. But things spiral when the father, increasingly guilt ridden after Ruby’s death, is sued for not properly installing a septic tank, which results in grave harm to a little boy. In the ensuing chaos, what really happened to Ruby finally emerges.With flowing prose that evokes the terrifying beauty of the Alaskan wilderness, Lin explores the fallout after the loss of a child and the way in which a family is forced to grieve in a place that doesn’t yet feel like home. Emotionally raw and subtly suspenseful,
  • The Unpassing
  • is a deeply felt family saga that dismisses the American dream for a harsher, but ultimately more profound, reality.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(63)
★★★★
25%
(53)
★★★
15%
(32)
★★
7%
(15)
22%
(47)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Stunning debut novel that will linger long after you finish

I'm the type of reader who might finish a book, start reading another, and quickly realize I can't remember a lot about the book I just completed (maybe I read too fast?). However, reading The Unpassing has been completely different. Mid-thought or mid-conversation, something will cause me to think about a scene from the book, and this has happened repeatedly. I'm certain I'll retain countless details from this story, and that's a testament to Chia-Chia Lin's ability to create and sustain a rich, emotionally intense, character-driven story from start to finish. Even more impressive is that so often the force of this novel comes from what goes unsaid as much as what is said (partly due to the narrator being a 10-year old child).

Ultimately, if you're interested in themes related to complex parent-child and sibling-sibling family dynamics, the intersection of guilt and love, coming-of-age, the immigrant experience, or life on the American Frontier, I can't recommend this novel enough!
22 people found this helpful
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Family loss in a place that doesn't yet feel like home

The Unpassing straddles many familiar genres – a coming of age story, an immigrant displacement saga, a grief odyssey, an American dream-gone-wrong tale. But the novel’s true journey is straight to the human heart and what survives when people disappear without our full awareness or our permission.

Our first-person narrator, Gavin, is a child when he contracts meningitis in school, right before the Challenger space shuttle is set to take off. When he awakes, he finds out that the shuttle has exploded and that his youngest sister Ruby has died, probably because he brought the virus into the house. Her death shatters the already vulnerable landscape of his Taiwanese parents who have relocated to the starkly beautiful but unforgiving state of Alaska.

Chia-Chia Lin writes many scenes that are haunting: Gavin and his mother coming across an impossible-to-conceive setting of a beached beluga whale. (“It looked too big to die, too big to vanish during a sudden, silent creak of the world. And what I thought, had they done with Ruby’s body?”) There are flying squirrels that take over the attic and eventually die en masse outdoors. And there’s the younger brother, Natty, who insists that his parents have disappeared, too, and have morphed into other people and the older sister, Pei-Pei, a teenager who, outside the home, is known as Paige.

There are many subtle questions here about the American Dream gone awry: a mom foraging for food on the road, the children’s embarrassment and dread of outsiders knowing they have little furniture or food, and even the realization that not all of us can afford police or hospital support in times of extreme need. Nothing is under one’s control – even the landscape outside, which can quickly shift from peaceful to threatening in the flash of an eye.

It’s a bleak book but then again, life isn’t always a fairy tale, particularly for those who are acting out their own tragedies in a land that is not quite yet home. 4.5 stars, rounded up.
7 people found this helpful
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Beautiful if grim

Beautifully written if spare and grim, this account of a family of Taiwanese immigrants attempting to make a life in Alaska will remain in memory. As it is, memory is the central theme here, as well as search for home: “It was a kind of violence, what my father had done. He had brought us to a place we didn’t belong, and taken us from a place we did. Now we yearned for all places and found peace in none.”

Told from the point of view of Gavin who is remembering the events of 1986 when he was 10. He looks back on that time to make sense of what happened, his contracting meningitis, and his younger sister's succumbing to the disease and the effect that had on the grieving family. Blaming himself for her illness, it is only later he learns the truth, which doesn't soften the memory.

Life in rural Alaska is brutally brought to life, and my only objection was to the resolution which was somehow hurried and felt a little unfinished.
6 people found this helpful
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Chia Chia at her finest!

I've been looking forward to this book ever since Chia Chia's journey to Alaska in 2005 that inspired this story! It's a gut wrenching tale of shifting family dynamics in response to a family tragedy. But I wouldn't characterize it as all bleak! There are some light-hearted encounters with squirrels and beluga whales and subtle comedic moments. The writing is top notch and I can't wait for her follow-up novel!
4 people found this helpful
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Chia Chia Lin is a truly gifted novelist!

A truly gifted writer, Chia Chia Lin, and her first novel, The Unpassing, prove she will be a major contender in the literary world. I can't wait for her next one!
4 people found this helpful
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For those who like beautiful writing and don’t mind their family sagas on the dark side

10-year-old Gavin comes home from school feeling sick. Days or perhaps weeks later, he wakes up to discover that his youngest sibling, Ruby, has contracted his illness (which turns out to be meningitis) and has died. So begins The Unpassing, which explores in shattering detail the toll this tragedy takes on a family of Taiwanese immigrants living in Alaska in the 1980s in search of a better life. It’s clear early on that there were strains in the family before Ruby’s death—Gavin’s father’s plumbing business is not doing well and his mother longs to go back to her fishing village in Taiwan where her mother and ailing father still live. Layered over these tensions, however, are blame for Ruby’s death, which pits the parents against each other, while narrator Gavin struggles silently with his guilt at bringing the sickness home with him, his older sister Pei Pei tries to move on and regain some semblance of normalcy, and his younger brother Natty searches in vain for Ruby, who he’s been told is merely “lost.”

This is a bleak book—things go from bad to worse and are framed by tragedies in the world at large (the Challenger explosion, the Chernobyl nuclear accident, the Exxon Valdez disaster)—but the writing is always good and often gorgeous, as when Gavin describes his sleepless nights: “As I sank away from consciousness, the overhead glare kept me swaying in the shallowest layer of sleep, a net of two-second dreams.” And author Chia-Chia Lin beautifully and heartbreakingly wrestles with the idea of “home” and what that means to people who don’t really feel they belong anywhere. Ruby’s death is the straw that collapses the fragile idea of home the family has built in Alaska, but Lin seems to suggest that even had she lived, a real sense of home would still prove elusive. “It was a kind of violence, what my father had done,” Gavin says. “He had brought us to a place we didn’t belong, and taken us from a place we did. Now we yearned for all places and found peace in none.” If you like beautiful writing and don’t mind your family sagas on the dark side, The Unpassing is an unflinching look at what it means to be an immigrant and to try to make a home and hold a family together in a strange world. Recommended.
4 people found this helpful
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Undeniably talented writer

The novel centers around a family of Taiwanese immigrants living in the outskirts of Anchorage, Alaska. I grew up in this very same area, understand all of the references in the novel and have been to or seen all of the places described.

So on the one hand, I can verify that the novel is authentic in that regard.

On the other hand, I do think it was far too brutally pessimistic. I get it, very tough times for this family. But the author also gives the impression of Alaska as some hellish prison which is quite a slanted view at best. And for all that, you get the impression that deep down the author still loves the place and cherished her time there, so I'm just not sure what to make of it all. I guess in the end I wish it was not so unrelentingly depressing, even about things and places that must be joyful at times.

With that said, I do think it's a very interesting look into the struggles of a recent immigrant family and certainly opened up my eyes to that world. I also appreciate how many things in this novel are left unmentioned and for the reader to fill in, though again when everything is so relentlessly depressing that tends to just swallow up the whole story. But for all of that criticism it is a very well-written novel and will stick in my mind.
3 people found this helpful
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A family fractures in despair - beautifully written

The Unpassing, by Chia-Chia Lin, is an extraordinary story of the disintegration of a Taiwanese family who came to America, choosing Alaska for their immigrant dream. It is narrated by Gavin, a young boy who fell sick and into a coma, waking up a week later to discover his younger sister Ruby had died as well. His school had an outbreak of meningitis. Because as a child, he lacks the words to express his feelings of guilt and his parents are too full of their own grief, anger, and guilt, they have no space to understand their children are also suffering, this book overflows with unexpressed pain.

Gavin’s family is poor, their small and narrow home surrounded by open space and woods. The anticipated development of a neighborhood as unrealized as all the rest of their dreams. Their poverty is exacerbated by a personal injury lawsuit against the father who is accused of a faulty septic tank installation that poisoned a young child. The father feels hopeless to defend himself, “;Once we entered that room, you see, it was over. It was their room, not ours.’ Gripping the wheel now, he shifted and straightened. ‘And when has a room ever been ours?’”

I loved The Unpassing even though it broke my heart time and again.This family was so close, living on top of each other in space and time, with very little relief in the form of outsiders. The kids had a few friends, a relatively affluent white family on the oher side of the woods, but the parents were isolated even from each other. They were, as Lin said in another context, ” too close—so close we couldn’t see each other.”

Lin does a phenomenal job of writing in the language of a ten-year-old without sounding juvenile or false. Gavin thinks deeply and says many profound things in the simple language of childhood. Even when it is clearly adult reflection on childhood, Lin maintains the beautiful language of simplicty. There is deep understanding of grief and alienation in The Unpassing as well as deep compassion for people in despair.
2 people found this helpful
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Stunning Debut

Driven more by characters than plot, The Unpassing by Chia-Chia Lin is an absolute stunning debut novel. Setting in Alaska in the late 1980s a Taiwanese-American family struggles to cope after the death of their youngest daughter. 10-year-old Gavin wakes up from a meningitis-induced coma, to find his sister Ruby didn’t survive. Over time we see the family begin to deteriorate. Beautiful prose and exploring the fragility of identity and sense of placelessness, this novel was amazing!
2 people found this helpful
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What a debut!

What is not spoken in this wonder of a novel is far more important than what is spoken. The author adeptly weaves symbols and whispers into a scathing personal and societal message of fear, of not belonging, and of love at its purest level.

The suffocating atmosphere can be challenging. But the reader is well compensated. I literally could not catch my breath when I reached the conclusion. I dare call this work a masterpiece and look forward for much to come from this writer.
1 people found this helpful