The South
Tash Aw. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $28 (304p) ISBN 978-0-374-61628-1
The stellar latest from Aw (The Harmony Silk Factory) chronicles a sensitive boy’s coming-of-age and his family’s private pain. “Wayward” adolescent Jay is the youngest of the Lim family, who leave their unnamed Malaysian city during his summer break from high school for their small farm in the south. Aw evokes a mood of pervasive decline, describing the financial troubles plaguing the country, the farm’s economic problems, and the deterioration of family patriarch Jack, a severe, unlikable math teacher. Against this melancholy backdrop, Aw masterfully juxtaposes the hopes and desires of the younger generation, crystallized in the tender, slow-burning relationship between Jay and a slightly older and stronger boy named Chuan, son of the farm’s manager. Questions of how to manage one’s inheritance, whether of material assets or emotional baggage, are central to the novel, as Aw explores how the characters, especially Jay’s mother, Sui, feel indebted and trapped. Through alternating close-third perspective, and occasional first-person passages from Jay, Aw offers a clear view into the characters’ inner lives, revealing their aching desires and the secret relationships and personal crises they hide from each other. In addition to the perceptive characterizations, Aw uses rich symbolism, such as the Lims’ ever-present tamarind grove, alive and beautiful but terminally diseased. This masterwork of psychological realism brings to mind the classic novels of E.M. Forster. Agent: Sarah Chalfant, Wylie Agency. (May)
Details
Reviewed on: 03/17/2025
Genre: Fiction
Hardcover - 288 pages - 978-0-7352-5089-5