Celeste Ng
Fiction 2022 | 235 pages
The three pillars of PACT:
- Outlaws promotion of un-American values and behaviors.
- Requires all citizens to report potential threats to our society.
- Protects children from environments espousing harmful views.
It is Cambridge, Massachusetts, just about a decade after PACT was passed by the House and Senate and became the law of the land. PACT was a reaction to the Crisis, an economic, social, familial, cultural, structural collapse of the American Society. No one actually knows what created this collapse, though within three years after it began, it became easier and easier to blame it on the Chinese, with no documentation or proof, just because a scapegoat was required.
Enter Bird, the 11-year old son of a Chinese-American woman, Margaret, and a Caucasian-American man, Ethan. As the book begins, we learn that Margaret left her husband and son three years ago, but we don’t know why. Ethan keeps telling their son to forget about her.
Of course, the consequences of PACT are fairly predictable to us as readers. People are arrested who participate in a demonstration, or even a conversation that is anti-PACT. Neighbors report neighbors for the slightest perceived infraction, or no infraction at all … especially if their skin has a yellow tinge. And perhaps most painful of all for society, children are continually removed from their homes and subjected to “re-placement” if a case can be made that the parents had any anti-PACT influence on them.
Bird begins to search for his mother without telling his father. This is much harder than today, because most books have been removed from the shelves and some burned, and the internet has been scoured “clean.” Bird comes to recognize that the absence of his mother, who is not only Chinese-American but verbally opposed to PACT, is actually to protect Bird and keep him united with his father.
Eventually he finds his mother, but I can tell you no more without giving away the plot.
This is a good read; an interesting read; a read that is steeped in world history and even present day. I do recommend you read it and I thank my friend Michelle for giving it to me!
July 2024