Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

BOOK SCANDALS SPARK A THRILLER

R. F. KUANG LAYS OUT THE ‘UGLY THINGS’ IN PUBLISHING IN A NEW SATIRE. THE REALITY IS EVEN WILDER, SHE SAYS.

- BY HELEN LI

. F. K U A N G , 26, is hardly a debut author. She has already published four fantasy novels infused with Chinese history and questions about colonial legacies, including the “Poppy War” trilogy and last year’s bestseller, “Babel, or the Necessity of Violence.” ¶ But Kuang’s new novel, “Yellowface,” is both a departure and a quantum leap straight into the zeitgeist. A dark satire on the publishing industry and the ironies of public discourse around Asian American representa­tion, it starts with a first-chapter twist. ¶ When rising-star novelist Athena Liu dies suddenly, her fellow writer and frenemy June Hayward is right there to pick up the pieces — or rather, to steal Athena’s manuscript, a saga involving Chinese laborers during World War I. June, who is white, publishes it as her own, but under a racially ambiguous name — Juniper Song. She scores a big book deal and rides a wave of “own voices” storytelli­ng in ways that make you question everything. ¶ Talking via phone with Kuang felt like divulging secrets we’ve all known. As an Asian American journalist, I’ve felt pressures similar to those Kuang explores. I too have wondered if I’m in demand to tick diversity boxes. I too have learned to package myself as a minority voice for white audiences. I too wonder if I’m participat­ing in a machine that claims to redistribu­te power only to tokenize. In “Yellowface,” I saw my worries on the page. ¶ Speaking from New Haven, Conn., where she is pursuing a PhD from Yale in East Asian languages and literature, Kuang admitted with delight that “every single thing that happens is based on a real scandal.” Folding in everything from the “American Dirt” controvers­y to the “Bad Art Friend” debate was part of the fun of writing a novel whose dizzying absurditie­s are still no match for reality.

Our wide-ranging conversati­on, covering scandals, cultural appropriat­ion and the scourge of social media call-outs, has been edited and condensed for clarity.

What was the inspiratio­n for this story?

It was mid-2021, so everyone was sitting at home. A lot of writers were in their goblin mode. The novel just plopped fully formed into my head one morning, which is not a super helpful way to understand where creative inspiratio­n comes from.

Publishing was going through what seems like all these watershed moments, having conversati­ons about change and diversity and caring about marginaliz­ed writers, et cetera, and I was feeling a bit cynical about it, especially because it seems like very few of those promises have actually come to fruition. So I was thinking about ways in which the industry capitalize­s on performati­ve care about diversity and uplifting marginaliz­ed voices [while] not ever changing in a structural way.

You’ve alluded to the diversity pushes that followed “American Dirt,” but you also joined a strike against HarperColl­ins. How much are the plotlines in “Yellowface” shaped by these scandals?

We’ve been pitching it as kind of an absurdist satire of the industry, but on the level of social realism, and it doesn’t even get close to describing the ridiculous things that happen day-to-day. There are so many Junes in publishing, and the things they are doing to each other are much, much worse than what June individual­ly does. “Yellowface” was very much directly influenced by stuff that was happening in publishing.

I’m very hesitant to take credit for any one thing I did helping out the strike; I think a lot of HarperColl­ins authors showed up. Obviously the people who deserve credit are [people] in the union who went without pay and put their whole livelihood and careers on the line.

You describe June and Athena as “friends through circumstan­ce.” Is

their relationsh­ip anything you’ve experience­d?

I don’t think writing friendship­s are any more vicious or intense than everyday friendship­s. But in any industry that feels intensely competitiv­e, we do a lot of clique forming and name-dropping and petty gossip. June and Athena are the only two profession­al writers that the other knows, so they stick together, even though they really despise each other. I’m fortunate in that my writing friendship­s are much healthier and mutually supportive.

While editing Athena’s novel, June is trying to preserve an Asian writer’s ideas but not really understand­ing the personal elements. When some “offensive” things get cut to make her material more accessible, she’s compliment­ed by her editor for killing her darlings. It looks virtuous, but it’s actually whitewashi­ng. Is that a pressure you have ever felt in your career?

I used to feel this pressure a lot more. I think I used to really not get along with my editor who edits my fantasy novels. I would feel all the time I was being pressured to whitewash the story to make things accessible. And the lovely thing about that relationsh­ip is that we’ve grown together. I’ve learned to figure out what works about my editor’s feedback and what doesn’t, and also to advocate for myself and explain where I’m coming from, what changes I absolutely can’t make. So I don’t struggle with that as much now, but that’s because I’m much more confident and mature in the editorial relationsh­ip.

Before I read the book, I found people who had read the advance copy on TikTok. They were saying: “Oh, my gosh, this protagonis­t is so terrible!” But sometimes, June says things I have been thinking about but have been afraid to say for fear of calling out my own community.

You’re supposed to feel for June. That’s the whole hat trick, right? Even when you’re writing the villains, you want somebody whose motivation­s are sometimes understand­able, whose logic is right maybe 60% of the time. She’s just so badly wrong about the other 40%. And the thing is, I think we all can relate to June harder than we can to Athena, because in this industry most of us are Junes. Very few people are overnight celebrity bestseller­s. The beginning of my career certainly looks a lot more like June’s career, so I felt her pain. So yeah, you’re supposed to uncomforta­bly like her, even though she does progressiv­ely unhinged things.

There’s a social media storm in the novel that felt very real. Have you ever had the fear of generating backlash?

I don’t think that much about social media backlash. Can’t think too much about it. I don’t think it’s a matter of personal safety for me so much as it is a matter of nuance and care. And what frustrates me about conversati­ons where people are supposedly calling each other out is that it often seems to come less from a place of genuinely wanting to work through thorny issues — instead of doing this work, people tend to just take sides, use very reductive language to describe what’s going on. And I don’t find that helpful for anyone. It’s not good for the community.

But I mean, for instance, I thought that there are some wonderful critical pieces of this film “Crazy Rich Asians” that were able to acknowledg­e how much it meant for a lot of people to see themselves as the protagonis­t of rom-coms while also criticizin­g the many things the film gets wrong. This kind of conversati­on is only possible if you don’t have a binary mentality. You can love this thing and criticize it at the same time.

Throughout “Yellowface,” we see how trauma can become very profitable for the market. You can even profit off being ”canceled.” In your publicity material, you said, “If anything, the system only turns critique into another way of profit.” At the same time, of course, you are part of that system. Did you ever wrestle with that irony?

It doesn’t seem like a terrible contradict­ion to me, because what was the alternativ­e? Not saying anything at all? I just refuse to publish anything, keep my silence? I think that would be worse. So even though the system, I believe, always swallows its own critiques, there’s still another benefit to publishing stories like this — just that it gets us talking. It gets Asian American writers discussing ways in which we can show better solidarity for one another. It lays a lot of ugly things about publishing out in the open so that maybe writers know what they’re getting into.

At heart, this feels like a story about who gets to tell whose story. Not just another group’s story, but another person’s. Athena used people’s stories in her fiction, June then used her research — on and on. What does it mean to ask for “consent” to use someone else’s experience in fiction?

Obviously, there are lots of different viewpoints on this. The story “Bad Art Friend,” which was circulatin­g around certain parts of Book Twitter a while back, really revealed that people have very differing attitudes on what you can lift from the people in your life. There’s some people who think that anything is fair play, as long as it’s fiction. You can grab other people by the ankles and shake them for the pocket change of their life experience­s. And maybe that’s completely permissibl­e from the perspectiv­e of making great art. I think it makes you kind of an a— to the people around you if you don’t talk to them about it.

I’m very hesitant to impose hard and fast standards on what people can and can’t write about. That being said, I probably would not write about my friend’s experience­s in the way Athena was. But that’s a matter of being a bad friend and a bad writer.

gets to tell whose stories? That question is at the heart of R. F. Kuang’s satirical thriller that melds reallife literary scandals into a meditation on cultural appropriat­ion and publishing.

You have been writing fantasy novels for years. What made you want to do something different?

I love different playground­s, I’ll try to keep hopping genres. As long as I have the career, I hate doing the same thing twice. Maybe I’ll do a rom-com. Maybe I’ll do a hard-boiled mystery novel. Maybe I’ll do a psychologi­cal thriller. I don’t know.

Well, June’s work gets optioned by Hollywood. Would you want to do that?

Everything I’ve heard about Hollywood makes me deeply anxious about ever heading over there. And so I have no immediate plans to, since I have to finish my PhD first.

And you’ll also have to go on a 10city book tour for “Yellowface.” What are you most excited or anxious about?

I’m anxious about my laundry. It’s really hard to wash your clothes from your city every week or every day. So I’m not sure how I’m going to have clean underwear for the entire tour. I really need to figure that out.

 ?? William Morrow ?? WHO
William Morrow WHO
 ?? John Packman ??
John Packman

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