Review: âEverything I Never Told Youâ a moving tale of a dysfunctional family
- Share via
âEverything I Never Told You,â Celeste Ngâs excellent first novel about family, love and ambition, opens with a death.
Indeed, the demise of Lydia Lee, the teenage middle daughter of a Chinese American professor and his Virginia-born wife, is announced in the very first sentence. âLydia is dead,â Ng writes. âBut they donât know this yet.â
With this as a starting point, âEverything I Never Told Youâ canât help but feel a little like a mystery, and the pages that follow do reveal, gradually, the cause of Lydiaâs death. At its core, though, Ngâs book is a conventional, domestically centered novel about an American family.
The Lees are outwardly successful. The father, James, is a professor at a college in a small Ohio town; Marilyn, his wife, is a former Harvard student who has put her ambitions on hold to raise their three children.
âEverything I Never Told Youâ unfolds in the 1970s, a time when the term âorientalâ was tossed about freely. Still, despite the Leesâ interracial status, issues of ethnic and cultural identity are largely secondary to Ngâs main ambition here: probing the emotional wounds that have scarred the family.
These wounds have been inflicted by the universal difficulties faced by intelligent people in the late 20th century. Marilyn is estranged from her cold and distant mother, a home economics teacher who prays at the feet of Betty Crocker and doesnât approve of her daughterâs marriage. âYouâre sure,â she asks after meeting James for the first time, âthat he doesnât just want a green card?â
James is a U.S. citizen. At the same time, he has never quite felt he belonged anywhere, and not just because he grew up as the lone Asian student in a Midwestern boarding school where his father was the janitor. In the 1960s, he became one of the first Asians to lecture in U.S. history at Harvard â but his students treated him like an exotic interloper. Years later, he has not shaken his sense of loneliness. Nor is he any less driven. His ambitions hover like a cloud over the family, especially over his oldest son, Nath.
âThough Nath dreamed of MIT, or Carnegie Mellon, or Caltech ⊠he knew there was only one place his father would approve: Harvard. To James, anything else was a failing,â Ng writes.
James and Marilyn are never cruel to their children. But they arenât especially loving either. In her last encounter with her doomed daughter, Marilyn means to say, âI love you,â but instead urges Lydia to study harder: âDonât let your life slip away from you.â To add a sense of urgency, Marilyn continues: âWhen Iâm dead, thatâs all I want you to remember.â Her motherâs words âsucked the breath from Lydiaâs lungs.â
Ng is herself a graduate of Harvard who grew up in an academic family in Ohio, and she renders the Lees with great precision and empathy. She is especially adept at describing interior spaces and the subtle ways in which brothers and sisters come to know about each otherâs lives.
Nath can see that âLydia has never really had friends, but their parents have never known.â Heâs privy to the many ways Lydia has feigned normality â by pretending to talk to friends on the phone, for instance. He is âamazed at the stillness in her face,â the way his sister âcan lie without even a raised eyebrow to give her away.â
The novel is on less sure footing when Ng must craft the inevitable police procedures that follow the discovery of Lydiaâs body at the bottom of a nearby lake. The scenes of mourning are not always convincing either â the parents among Ngâs readers may find Jamesâ actions in the days after his daughterâs death either perplexing or contrived.
But those are quibbles in what is an accomplished debut. To begin with a teenager dying may be a melodramatic device, but Ngâs portrait of the relationship between Lydia and Marilyn, especially, feels true and fully realized. Itâs also heart-wrenching.
Without realizing it, Marilyn (her own dreams of medical school forever postponed) is slowly killing her daughter with impossibly high expectations. âAll her life she had heard her motherâs heart drumming one beat: doctor, doctor, doctor,â Ng writes of Lydia. âShe wanted this so much, Lydia knew, that she no longer needed to say it.â
In the end, Ng deftly pulls together the strands of this complex, multigenerational novel. âEverything I Never Told Youâ is an engaging work that casts a powerful light on the secrets that have kept an American family together â and that finally end up tearing it apart.
Follow me on Twitter @TobarWriter
Everything I Never Told You
A Novel
Celeste Ng
Penguin Press: 298 pp., $26.95
More to Read
Sign up for our Book Club newsletter
Get the latest news, events and more from the Los Angeles Times Book Club, and help us get L.A. reading and talking.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.