Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Author illuminate­s lives of people from both sides of the Pacific

- Ann Levin

A Chinese tech company recently made headlines for its use of “smart” cushions in office chairs to monitor its employees’ workplace performanc­e. It’s the kind of creepy surveillan­ce you’d expect in the dystopian fiction of George Saunders – and now, the blazingly talented newcomer Te-Ping Chen.

The daughter of Chinese immigrants, Chen is a reporter for The Wall Street Journal who spent several years covering Hong Kong and Beijing for the newspaper. In her debut story collection, “Land of Big Numbers” (Mariner Books), she moves effortlessly between the two countries, illuminati­ng the lives of ordinary, often damaged, people on both sides of the Pacific.

Some of her characters are depicted as victims of the cruel conditions of their society, whether it’s the totalitari­an rule of Communist China or the rampant consumeris­m of capitalist America. Others are just wounded souls.

In “Field Notes on a Marriage,” an American anthropolo­gist with gauzy, romantic notions of China visits the parents of her Chinese husband, who has committed suicide, and learns terrible truths about both him and the govwhen ernment. In “Beautiful Country,” a Chinese-born nurse in Tucson, Arizona, settles for a narcissist­ic, condescend­ing American boyfriend because she wants to start a family and bring her parents over from China.

Sometimes, the stories take a turn for the surreal, as in “Gubeikou Spirit,” a group of Beijing subway riders is trapped for months in an undergroun­d station. “New Fruit” is a strange and beautiful allegory about a nectarine-like hybrid that initially produces euphoria in anyone who eats it, followed by bitterness and despair. Is it a commentary on the arc of political revolution­s – or just a beguiling story?

Chen has said she’s interested in the trade-offs people are willing to make to prosper under repressive regimes, yet she is the least didactic of writers. Her characters are finely etched, often quirky, sometimes wonderful, like the lovable old man of “Flying Machine,” proud inventor of a noodle-slicing robot, determined to build an airplane out of flotsam and jetsam – even though he doesn’t know how to fly – to gain admission to the Chinese Communist Party.

In an interview with the New Yorker, where her first published story “Lulu” appeared in 2019, Chen was asked to reflect on her dual-track career. “Journalism is like writing in a bright, sunlit room,” she said. “Fiction is much more solitary, a kind of walking in the dark.” These stories combine both – the unadorned clarity of the very best newspaper writing and the inspired, weird, poetic inventions of fiction. Chen is the real deal.

 ?? MARINER BOOKS ?? “Land of Big Numbers” by Te-Ping Chen.
MARINER BOOKS “Land of Big Numbers” by Te-Ping Chen.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States