Poets & Writers

Jiaming Tang

INTRODUCED BY Jessamine Chan author of the novel The School for Good Mothers, published by Simon & Schuster in 2022

WHEN I first read Jiaming Tang’s stunning debut novel last summer, I instantly felt sure it would become part of the canon of queer literature, Asian American literature, literature period. Having met when Jiaming worked on the editorial team at Marysue Rucci Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, and become good friends IRL—we joke that I’m his “book auntie”—I suspected I’d enjoy his novel, but I had no idea it would become one of my all-time favorites.

Set in China and New York, is an epic love story between closeted gay men in rural Fuzhou who meet and falltheir wives. Spanning decades and effortlessly leaping between past and present, Tang’s debut offers readers a tale of friendship and survival, a tribute to New York City’s China-town, and a rare and urgent portrait of Chinese America that celebrates the lives of factory workers, laborers, prep cooks, nail technicians—people often rendered invisible in both life and art. Rereading it now, what comes through even more is the book’s joy and tenderness and romance. The characters’ willingness to dream and search for beauty even in the most desperate circumstances. The wicked humor of the gossipy omniscient narrator. The confidence of Tang’s prose. I’ve spent the past year telling everyone I know about , and I couldn’t be more thrilled to introduce Jiaming Tang here.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Poets & Writers

Poets & Writers3 min read
Reactions
Feedback from readers I appreciated Philip Metres’s passionate and nuanced take on the Israel-Gaza disaster (“In This Time of War: The Muses Refuse Silence,” May/June 2024). I am a Jew who believes that, given the oppression and murder Jews have endu
Poets & Writers1 min read
The Written Image
To find one’s own book on a library shelf, for many authors, is a momentous event. But to discover one’s book on a wee shelf in a miniature library may be, by some measures, an even bigger deal. Consider the twenty-one authors whose tiny tomes, pictu
Poets & Writers5 min read
When It Happens to You
ONE part of my job (and a part that I am constantly trying to find more time for) is e-mailing prospective authors. While the majority of my clients do come to me via the “slush pile”—the unsolicited queries writers send to me—sometimes I write to th

Related Books & Audiobooks