The Family Chao: A Novel
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Published Reviews
Booklist Review
In her first book in a dozen years, Chang (All Is Forgotten, Nothing Is Lost, 2010)--the first woman and first Asian American director of the storied Iowa Writers' Workshop--introduces the family Chao who, for 35 years, has been feeding grateful customers at their Fine Chao restaurant in Haven, Wisconsin. More recently, the Chaos have been mired in, true to their name, utter chaos with that capital C; Chang is especially clever with names throughout. Long-suffering mother Winnie finally escaped emotionally vicious father Leo to become a Buddhist nun. Oldest son William "Dagou" (Mandarin for Big Dog) returned home expecting to eventually inherit the family business. Ming fled for a prestigious East Coast education and enviably lucrative career. James is still in college and was supposed to become the proverbial doctor. Christmas demands another uncomfortable reunion. That this year is different is grave understatement: both parents die, leaving Dagou accused of murder. Glimmers of Chang's irrefutable pedigrees occasionally sparkle through multigenerational wrongs, disastrous relationships, and complicated expositions. Alas, tenacity is necessary to endure didactic screeds about race, identity, love, and loyalty for a perhaps-too-obvious whodunit reveal.
Publisher's Weekly Review
Chang follows up All Is Forgotten, Nothing Is Lost with an ingenious and cunning reboot of Dostoyevsky's The Brothers Karamazov. The harrowing and humorous family drama is wrapped in a murder mystery about a family of Chinese immigrants headed by patriarch Leo Chao, who builds a successful Chinese restaurant in Haven, Wis., with his wife, Winnie. Like Leo's Dostoyevskian equivalent, Fyodor Karamazov, he has three sons: the youngest, James, who's lost his Mandarin; the middle, Ming, who now lives in Manhattan; and the eldest, Dagou, the restaurant's head chef. All is not well in the family. The sons reunite in Haven for the annual Christmas party to find that Winnie has tired of her tyrannical husband and has left him to seek spiritual enlightenment. The locals, meanwhile, have turned on Leo, as well: some in response to his cutthroat business dealings, others out of racism. After the party, Leo turns up dead, the authorities suspect foul play, and Dagou is charged with murder. As in Dostoyevsky's novel, there is a trial, and important Chao family secrets will come to light, but Chang retells the story in a manner all her own, adding incisive wit while retaining the pathos. In this timely, trenchant, and thoroughly entertaining book, an immigrant family's dreams are paid for in blood. For Chang, this marks a triumphant return. (Feb.)
Kirkus Book Review
A Chinese American family reckons with its patriarch's murder in this modern-day reboot of The Brothers Karamazov. When James, the youngest of the three Chao brothers, returns home to Wisconsin from college for Christmas, he's braced for drama. His imperious, abrasive father, Leo, has driven his mother to a Buddhist sanctuary. The middle brother, Ming, made his fortune in New York to escape the family's orbit and is only grudgingly visiting. And the eldest brother, Dagou, has labored at the family restaurant for years in hopes of a stake in the business only to be publicly rebuffed by Leo. Leo is murderously frustrating, so it's not exactly surprising when he's found dead, trapped in the restaurant's freezer room, its escape key suspiciously absent. Chang's well-turned third novel neatly balances two substantial themes. One is the blast radius of family dysfunction; the novel is largely told from James' (more innocent) perspective, but Chang deftly shows how each of the brothers, and the partners, exes, and onlookers around them, struggles to make sense of Leo and his death. (Handily, the plural of Chao is chaos.) The second is the way anti-immigrant attitudes warp the truth and place additional pressure on an overstressed family: When one of the brothers faces trial for Leo's death, news reports and local gossip are full of crude stereotypes about the "Brothers Karamahjong" and rumors of the restaurant serving dog meat. As with Dostoevsky's original, the story culminates in a trial that becomes a stage for broader debates over obligation, morality, and family. But Chang is excellent at exploring this at a more intimate level as well. A later plot twist deepens the tension and concludes a story that smartly offers only gray areas in response to society's demands for simplicity and assurance. A disruptive, sardonic take on the assimilation story. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Reviews
In her first book in a dozen years, Chang (All Is Forgotten, Nothing Is Lost, 2010)—the first woman and first Asian American director of the storied Iowa Writers' Workshop—introduces the family Chao who, for 35 years, has been feeding grateful customers at their Fine Chao restaurant in Haven, Wisconsin. More recently, the Chaos have been mired in, true to their name, utter chaos with that capital C; Chang is especially clever with names throughout. Long-suffering mother Winnie finally escaped emotionally vicious father Leo to become a Buddhist nun. Oldest son William "Dagou" (Mandarin for Big Dog) returned home expecting to eventually inherit the family business. Ming fled for a prestigious East Coast education and enviably lucrative career. James is still in college and was supposed to become the proverbial doctor. Christmas demands another uncomfortable reunion. That this year is different is grave understatement: both parents die, leaving Dagou accused of murder. Glimmers of Chang's irrefutable pedigrees occasionally sparkle through multigenerational wrongs, disastrous relationships, and complicated expositions. Alas, tenacity is necessary to endure didactic screeds about race, identity, love, and loyalty for a perhaps-too-obvious whodunit reveal. Copyright 2021 Booklist Reviews.
Publishers Weekly Reviews
Chang follows up All Is Forgotten, Nothing Is Lost with an ingenious and cunning reboot of Dostoyevsky's The Brothers Karamazov. The harrowing and humorous family drama is wrapped in a murder mystery about a family of Chinese immigrants headed by patriarch Leo Chao, who builds a successful Chinese restaurant in Haven, Wis., with his wife, Winnie. Like Leo's Dostoyevskian equivalent, Fyodor Karamazov, he has three sons: the youngest, James, who's lost his Mandarin; the middle, Ming, who now lives in Manhattan; and the eldest, Dagou, the restaurant's head chef. All is not well in the family. The sons reunite in Haven for the annual Christmas party to find that Winnie has tired of her tyrannical husband and has left him to seek spiritual enlightenment. The locals, meanwhile, have turned on Leo, as well: some in response to his cutthroat business dealings, others out of racism. After the party, Leo turns up dead, the authorities suspect foul play, and Dagou is charged with murder. As in Dostoyevsky's novel, there is a trial, and important Chao family secrets will come to light, but Chang retells the story in a manner all her own, adding incisive wit while retaining the pathos. In this timely, trenchant, and thoroughly entertaining book, an immigrant family's dreams are paid for in blood. For Chang, this marks a triumphant return. (Feb.)
Copyright 2021 Publishers Weekly.Reviews from GoodReads
Citations
Chang, L. S. (2022). The Family Chao: A Novel . W. W. Norton & Company.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Chang, Lan Samantha. 2022. The Family Chao: A Novel. W. W. Norton & Company.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Chang, Lan Samantha. The Family Chao: A Novel W. W. Norton & Company, 2022.
Harvard Citation (style guide)Chang, L. S. (2022). The family chao: a novel. W. W. Norton & Company.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)Chang, Lan Samantha. The Family Chao: A Novel W. W. Norton & Company, 2022.
Copy Details
Collection | Owned | Available | Number of Holds |
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Libby | 1 | 0 | 0 |