Aimee Liu is the author of the new novel Glorious Boy. Her other books include Cloud Mountain and Flash House, and her work has appeared in a variety of publications, including the Los Angeles Review of Books and the Los Angeles Times. She lives in Los Angeles.
Q: How did you come up with the idea
for Glorious Boy, and for your characters, the Durants?
A: The core of this story came to me
in one of those dreams that send you to your desk in the middle of the night.
In my dream, a young girl was hiding
with a mute little boy while a massive evacuation was underway outside. She
knew that the boy’s parents needed to flee, but she also knew they wouldn’t
take her with them. She was local to the island where this was happening, and
they were foreign and white.
She didn’t want to be separated from
the little boy, so she took him into hiding, but when they emerged, the parents
were gone, there was smoke in the distance, and she realized that she and this
child were in big trouble.
Without having any specifics, I sensed
that this all took place in the Andaman Islands, a setting that had fascinated
me for some years. It’s a wild tropical archipelago in the Bay of Bengal.
Until the 1900s, the Andamans were
occupied by indigenous tribes dating back 60,000 years. After the British built
a penal colony for Indian rebels, which became the capital, Port Blair, the
tribes began to die out, but a few still survive today.
What I didn’t learn until I actually
visited in 2010 was that the Andamans were occupied by the Japanese in World War
II, and there actually was a massive and traumatic evacuation of foreigners
from Port Blair in 1942, just days before the enemy invasion.
A handful of British officers and
soldiers were left behind, waiting for a second evacuation ship that never
arrived. One of these men was publicly executed by the Japanese as an example
to the local population of Indians, who initially greeted the Japanese as
“liberators” but soon were subjugated by them.
After learning of this World War II
history, my dream quickly bloomed into a full-scale novel.
Shep and Claire Durant are both
running from scarred childhoods -- in Shanghai and Connecticut, respectively --
in hopes of finding refuge in the Andamans, where he’s posted as Civil Surgeon
and she’s trying to establish herself as an anthropologist like her idol
Margaret Mead.
Their son Ty is their beloved
“glorious boy,” but Claire has difficulty bonding with him, in part because she
longs to be in the rainforest doing field work with “her” Andamanese tribe, and
in part because Ty doesn’t speak. Only their servant girl Naila communicates
easily with Ty, through their own mysterious silent language.
The tensions and jealousies that
swirl around Ty lead to disastrous consequences on the day of the Durants’
evacuation. As in my dream, Naila finds herself in big trouble, but in the
story the jeopardy extends to the entire family.
Q: What kind of research did you do
to write the book, and did you learn anything especially surprising?
A: When I began this project 17 years
ago, the Andaman archipelago was still a restricted territory. Foreigners were
discouraged from visiting, and few people knew about these islands outside of India.
I first learned about the Andamans from an anthropologist’s wife, which is why
I envisioned Claire as an aspiring ethnographer.
Initially, there wasn’t much about the
islands online. I only found a few books here in Los Angeles, most of which focused
on the indigenous tribes. I had no idea that the Andamans had played a key role
in World War II.
By 2010, the islands were beginning
to welcome tourists, and I finally visited Port Blair.
On Ross Island, the haunting little
island where you can see the ruins of the former British cantonment, my fantastic
guide procured for me a set of rare books and pamphlets written by local
authors. These included detailed memories of people who had grown up before the
Japanese invasion and lived through occupation.
These details brought the history to
life and opened up exciting plot possibilities. I could never have written this
novel if I hadn’t traveled to the Andamans and breathed the heat and humidity,
walked those beaches, and found those texts.
Q: How was the book's title chosen,
and what does it signify for you?
A: As I always seem to, I agonized
over the title for this book. There are so many important themes and sub-themes
within the story, and each presented possible titles.
But I always loved that phrase
“glorious boy,” which is Shep’s description for his baby son. It became my preferred
title after I read Donna Tartt’s The Goldfinch.
The title of The Goldfinch refers to
the object around which that novel’s plot revolves. The Goldfinch is a
painting, an object of desire and a symbol of comfort and love. It’s a passive,
rather than an active participant, yet it drives the plot.
Little Ty is much more active than a
painting, of course. He has a headstrong and mysterious nature. But he’s only 4
in the thick of the story. His age and muteness severely limit his agency. Like
the Goldfinch painting, he’s the object of jealousy and longing. He must be
protected and saved. He must be found and rescued.
I like Glorious Boy as a title also
because it’s somewhat ironic. Ty is as difficult as he is glorious. And the
phrase bonds him with his father, who might be considered the truly glorious active
boy of the plot.
We learn a lot about Shep’s own
boyhood and his love of Kim, that other glorious boy of colonial India, who
went “southward to he knew not what fate.” I love titles that are
multi-layered, and this one fits the bill!
Q: The Publishers Weekly review of
the book says, "Liu upends the clichés of the white savior
narrative." What do you think of that assessment?
A: I’m exceedingly grateful for that
comment. One the most cringeworthy refrains in colonial Asia was, “We are their
mothers and their fathers.” White Europeans loved to infantilize their “little
brown” subjects.
The main reason I thrust an American
character into this colonial maelstrom is that she – Claire – brings a
jaundiced eye to those patriarchal tendencies.
Even though Shep grew up in colonial
Shanghai and balked at many of those tendencies, he also absorbed more of them
than he realizes, and this causes friction, especially when he and Claire
disagree about the amount of trust they can or should place in Naila as she
grows closer and closer to little Ty.
I don’t want to give the plot away,
but as the story unfolds, it’s not at all clear who is best equipped to protect
themselves, much less Ty. When everyone is fully and honestly human, no one
group or individual gets to claim the title of Savior.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I have a memoir about my father
that’s long been in the works. Like Shep, my dad grew up in Shanghai, leaving
when he was 19 in 1932. But my father was biracial, half Chinese and half
American.
In many ways he was defined by his
divided loyalties between his parents and their opposing ethnicities, cultures,
educations, families, and nationalities. I’m fascinated by the ways that his
conflicted loyalties filtered through him to affect not only my family’s
dynamics but also my own identity.
The memoir is taking a long time
because I also work as a ghostwriter, so every few months I have to drop
everything and plunge into someone else’s book project. These breaks can be
helpful in creating distance, allowing me to return to my own work with a fresh
eye, but the back and forth does stretch the timetable!
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: Thank you for all that you do to
bring authors and readers together! Now especially. Launching a book in the
middle of a pandemic is a challenge I never anticipated, but it’s so heartening
to meet people like you who have embraced the Web as a means of forming
literary connections even when we can’t all meet in person. I stand in
gratitude to you, Deborah!
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
No comments:
Post a Comment