The Columbus Dispatch

Author finds depth in familiar topic

- By Jonathan Russell Clark jrussellcl­ark@gmail.com

Autobiogra­phical feels like the right descriptio­n for Rachel Khong’s “Goodbye, Vitamin.” But because I don’t know whether her debut novel is based on her life (and because it doesn’t matter if it is), I’ll say her novel feels “lived in.”

Khong has crafted a believably human protagonis­t in Ruth, a 30-year-old woman who’s back in her childhood home to help take care of her father, who has Alzheimer’s. “Goodbye, Vitamin” follows Ruth’s adventures in her old stamping ground for one year, during which she also tends to her own problems, including a broken heart and a lack of purpose.

Young adults returning home to confront their past is well-worn territory in fiction, but Khong is a skilled-enough writer to make Ruth’s narrative feel fresh and insightful. As a storytelle­r, she doesn’t rely on cliches or over-the-top

antics to push Ruth to a pat epiphany. Instead, Khong’s plot subtly amasses, adding layer by short layer until the depth of the novel and its characters hits readers by surprise.

Khong also has a gift for crisp quips that double as keen characteri­zation. As Ruth considers her previous engagement to Joel, now her ex, she thinks, “You know what else is unfair about Joel? That I loosened the jar lid, so somebody else could open him.”

Another time Ruth wonders whether she and her father haven’t adequately reciprocat­ed her mother’s love: “Here’s the fear: She gave to us, and we ■ took from her, until she disappeare­d.”

And when Ruth contemplat­es another relationsh­ip, she decides, “I’m through with doing things that don’t count. I’m through with things that don’t add up or amount.”

These relatable lines are part of what makes “Goodbye, Vitamin” such an enjoyably poignant and refreshing­ly honest novel. Khong doesn’t try to make Ruth’s problems pitiable or tragic; rather, Ruth’s situation is presented with a straight face and rich details, so that the reader is too immersed in Khong’s lovely prose and Ruth’s engaging personalit­y to worry about the relative originalit­y of the premise.

As Ruth navigates her childhood environmen­t as an adult, “Goodbye, Vitamin” succeeds in relaying that strange feeling of being home again after a long time away. It’s like going back to class after a long, complicate­d summer — that strange combinatio­n of familiarit­y and discomfort. Only Ruth doesn’t have teachers, assignment­s and study hall waiting at the end of her break (if we can call it that).

Khong’s novel, then, is the perfect summer read for those of us who don’t have school to return to, who only have life and responsibi­lities waiting for us, at the end of whatever journey we’re on at the moment.

 ??  ?? “Goodbye, Vitamin” (Henry Holt, 208 pages, $26) by Rachel Khong
“Goodbye, Vitamin” (Henry Holt, 208 pages, $26) by Rachel Khong

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States