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BookDragon Blog

11 Jan / All That’s Left Unsaid by Tracey Lien [in Booklist]

Denny died at the Lucky 8 restaurant after his high school formal, his “Most Likely to Succeed”-sash still tucked into his borrowed suit. In 1996 small-town Cabramatta, populated by children of Southeast Asian refugees coming of age amidst drug-related violence, Denny was that perfect kid: an academic superstar beloved by his struggling parents.

Although Denny was surrounded by people who cared, no one will admit to seeing what happened to him. When older sister Ky, a Melbourne journalist, returns home for the funeral, she disregards the ineffective (white) police to tenaciously uncover the truth for herself.

Aileen Huynh ciphers the majority; while she’s consistently affecting as Ky, she doesn’t particularly distinguish other witnesses. Yen Nguyen shatters hearts as Denny; Amelia Nguyen stands out – for memorable characterization, but also somewhat awkwardly for being the only other-witness narrator – as prodigious 10-year-old Lulu, whose social pyramid analysis (from the “white Kimberlys” to the “soy sauce sandwich”-eaters) is brilliantly biting.

Quibbles aside, debut novelist Tracey Lien gets an aural boost from her fellow Australian trio.

Review: “Media,” Booklist, November 1, 2022

Readers: Adult

Published: 2022

By SIBookDragon in Adult Readers, Audio, Australian, Australian Asian, Fiction, Repost, Southeast Asian Tags > Aileen Huynh, All That's Left Unsaid, Amelia Nguyen, BookDragon, Booklist, Coming-of-age, Death, Drugs/Alcohol/Addiction, Family, Friendship, Identity, Immigration, LGBTQIA+, Murder, Mystery, Parent/child relationship, Race/Racism, Refugees, Siblings, Tracey Lien, Yen Nguyen
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