In New York City, an art student finds an unexpected subject when she moves in with a grandmother from Xi'an, and boundaries are put into question. When a newlywed couple moves to Arizona, adapting to unfamiliar customs keeps their marriage from falling apart. A woman grapples with what it means to care for another, and the limits of that care, when her dying husband returns from Beijing years after abandoning her. And during a rainy summer in Texas, a visitor exposes the unspoken but unburiable history that binds two families together. Ada Zhang writes with startling honesty and love about lives young and old, in a stunning debut that explores what happens when we leave home and what happens when we stay, and the selves we meet and shed in the process of becoming.
Like a flash, these stories are a burst of light, ending almost as soon as they start, but they leave a strong afterglow.
--Alice Martin, Shelf Awareness
[Ada Zhang] builds each story carefully and quietly lets it rise to sudden moments of surprising power. She is indeed a writer to watch.
--Si Dunn, Lone Star Literary Review
Discovering Ada Zhang was one of the high points of my summer reading.
--Susan Balée, The Hudson Review
Illuminating and life-changing.
--Adam Vitcavage, Debutiful