cover image Rental House

Rental House

Weike Wang. Riverhead, $28 (224p) ISBN 978-0-593-54554-6

In this wonderfully acerbic outing from Wang (Joan Is Okay), a married couple from New York City face pressure from their in-laws and others on two separate vacations. First, Nate and Keru host Keru’s Chinese immigrant parents on Cape Cod, where they’ve rented a house. On their final night together, they debate the virtues of suffering, which Keru’s mother prizes as essential to a person’s success. Then they host Nate’s parents, blue-collar Trump supporters from the Blue Ridge Mountains who Keru struggles to connect with, especially after Nate’s mother complains about the house being too small. Five years later, the couple rents a bungalow in the Catskills, where comments from neighbors about their “double income, no kids” household activate a long-dormant fault line in the couple’s relationship: Nate, a scientist, earns far less than Keru, a business consultant. Later, Nate’s deadbeat older brother makes a surprise appearance, talking up his newest business venture, a gym, and pressuring Nate to invest in it. Wang excels at setting the tone with biting prose, describing the Catskills’ fall foliage as the “mass death of deciduous leaves,” and the scenes of family drama are compulsively readable. It’s a tour de force. Agent: Joy Harris, Joy Harris Literary. (Dec.)