[Last
October I had a lot of fun sharing and AmericanStudying some of my recent
reads, and it brought out great responses and nominations for a crowd-sourced
weekend post. So this year I wanted to do the same, and would love to hear
what you’ve been reading for another weekend list!]
On necessary
darkness, literary legacies, and the optimism of recovery and resistance.
As part of that
series last year, I highlighted
a novel—Tommy Orange’s stunning There
There (2018)—which thoroughly and importantly challenged my critical
optimism. I don’t know that I’ll ever read another American novel that does so
more potently, but the best novel I’ve read so far this year is at the very
least a close contender. C. Pam Zhang’s rightly acclaimed debut novel How
Much of These Hills is Gold (2020) is a masterpiece of revisionist
historical fiction in the best sense of every word in that phrase, opening up
the experiences of Chinese Americans (and all Americans) in the mid-19th
century American West with a combination of lyricism and raw realism that felt genuinely
unique (no easy feat in a novel published in 2020). As this excellent
NPR review notes, Zhang’s novel is profoundly pessimistic, with every
moment and event adding one more layer to what the reviewer calls “a perpetual
state of longing and disappointment.” That darkness feels just as earned, and
just as necessary, as does Orange’s, but there’s no getting around the fact that
it makes Zhang’s book a painful read (if, again, a consistently lyrical and
beautiful one).
As with any
great novel, however, there are many more layers to How Much than its tones, and I wanted to highlight two in
particular here. That NPR reviewer also notes the book’s clear echoes of
William Faulkner’s As
I Lay Dying (1930), as Zhang’s novel likewise features children (in
this case the siblings Lucy and Sam, 12 and 11 respectively) on a quest to bury
a deceased parent (their father, known by the Mandarin “Ba”) whose voice and body
alike often dominate the novel as fully as did Addie Bundren’s in Faulkner’s
book. Of course Faulkner looms large for any subsequent American novelist, but
I would argue that Zhang’s location of her novel in the legacy of Dying is more specific and more pointed
than that. As my college friend and wonderful fellow
AmericanStudier Heidi Kim argues in a chapter of her book Invisible
Subjects (2016), “The Foreign Faulkner: The Mississippi Chinese in Faulkner’s
South,” that “Faulkner makes use of the Chinese at pivotal moments to discuss
the intrusion and socioeconomic containment of a foreign presence.” (A few
decades earlier, Charles Chesnutt does the same with a singular Chinese
American figure in a
pivotal early chapter in The Marrow
of Tradition [1901]). But I think Heidi would agree with me that Faulkner
isn’t much interested in the Chinese American community on its own terms, and
so Zhang’s novel can be seen as both an extension of and yet a challenge to
this element of his literary legacy.
Much of the
darkness of Zhang’s book is intertwined with that idea of Chinese Americans as “a
foreign presence”: the novel’s epigraph is “This land is not your land,” and
even though in the first chapter Lucy recalls her father telling her “You remember
you belong to this place as much as anybody,” it feels that the exclusionary
narrative and its destructive effects often dominate Lucy and Sam’s experiences.
I hope it’s clear that I’m not trying in any way to minimize that bracingly dark
and painful side to Zhang’s novel, which again offers an important counterpoint
for critical optimists like myself. But you know me well enough to know that I
have to end on a more optimistic note, and it’s this: the writing and existence
of Zhang’s novel, to me, represents a potent form of both recovery and
resistance. That is, by telling the story of Chinese Americans in this mid-19th
century America, Zhang at the same time implicitly but crucially pushes back on
any narrative that seeks to exclude that community from American histories,
stories, identities. A book doesn’t need a happy ending (and Zhang’s book
certainly doesn’t offer one) to help us move toward a more perfect union, and
to my mind this book is a vital example of how historical fiction can do just
that.
Next recent read
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Recent reads you’d share for the weekend post?
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