Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

‘Your House Will Pay’ explores race, redemption

- By Oline H. Cogdill

The “house” in Steph Cha’s riveting first stand-alone novel references many types of houses.

There is the home in which you live, but house also refers to where you work, your friends and prisons, both physical and emotional, those things that bind people and that we call home.

This house motif — and its myriad meanings — effectivel­y moves throughout Cha’s engrossing story about race, redemption and forgivenes­s.

“Your House Will Pay” also is an emotional look at families and how trauma and violence can reverberat­e for generation­s, causing one character to worry about “how easily kids absorbed the spilled poison of the grown-up world.” History uncomforta­bly repeats itself in the story.

Grace Park, a 27-year-old pharmacist, attends a rally protesting the Los Angeles police shooting of a black teenager, joining her sister, Miriam. She is estranged from their Korean immigrant parents with whom Grace still lives.

Grace’s life consists of work in the family pharmacy and going home to her parents, who are unresponsi­ve to her outrage at the shooting and who refuse to discuss why they and Miriam won’t talk. Miriam also won’t discuss their parents, only saying that their mother is “not a good person.”

The incident echoes a decades-earlier shooting in which black teenager Ava Matthews was killed by a Korean liquor store manager. The shopkeeper disappeare­d after being convicted of voluntary manslaught­er for killing the unarmed girl. The shopkeeper’s sentence was probation,

community service and a $500 fine.

Ava’s death nearly destroyed her younger brother, Shawn, who joined a gang and spent a few years in prison. But Shawn turned his life around, has settled down with a steady job, a girlfriend and her daughter, and has been a surrogate dad to the family of his cousin, Ray, who has been in jail for 10 years.

Shawn knows deep down, though, that “he was loosely held by the world, that he was one snap away from a total unmooring.”

The legacy of these two families, torn apart by race and history, intersects as their problems become a microcosm of problems festering in Los Angeles.

For the Matthews and Park families, justice is messy, tainted by a litany of “what ifs” that could have changed their lives.

Racial tensions rear up, even among characters who honestly believe they are not bigoted. Each family will learn uncomforta­ble truths about itself as they try to rise about the past.

Cha unflinchin­gly delves into the complex emotions that drive families, violence and the need to survive.

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“Your House Will Pay” By Steph Cha (Ecco, $27)
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