Margaret was a poet and activist-which stands against the PACT (Preserving American Culture and Traditions Act) act. Bird’s father does not speak much of Margaret, other than proclaiming she held unpatriotic ideas. His mother Margaret, a Chinese American poet, left the family when he was nine years old. We meet twelve-year-old Bird who lives with his father at a university. And despite everything that happens and is discussed, that is the key. Still, at the heart of the story is the relationship between mother and son. Devastating loss of jobs, protests turned violent and overall unease and a fearful mentality approach to day-to-day life. While there’s no impact from a pandemic in this version of the U.S., there’s economic and political turmoil. While her other novels are set in a present day format, Our Missing Hearts is technically dystopian fiction, but yet, the world doesn’t feel so dissimilar to our current reality. It’s so readable and everlasting-her words truly stay with you for a long time. Her stories have this precise quality to draw you in with sophisticated writing and vivid details. I quite enjoyed Celeste Ng’s previous novel, Little Fires Everywhere, and the Hulu series as well. This novel was one of my most-anticipated of the year.
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