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Summary and Reviews of But the Girl by Jessica Yu

But the Girl by Jessica Zhan Mei Yu

But the Girl

by Jessica Zhan Mei Yu
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  • Mar 2024, 270 pages
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Book Summary

"Having been Jane Eyre, Anna Karenina and Esther Greenwood all my life, my writing was an opportunity for the reader to have to be me…"

Girl was born on the very day her parents and grandmother immigrated from Malaysia to Australia. The story goes that her mother held on tight to her pelvic muscles in an effort to gift her the privilege of an Australian passport. But it's hard to be the embodiment of all your family's hopes and dreams, especially in a country that's hostile to your very existence.

When Girl receives a scholarship to travel to the UK, she is finally free for the first time. In London and then Scotland she is meant to be working on a PhD on Sylvia Plath and writing a postcolonial novel. But Girl can't stop thinking about her upbringing and the stories of the people who raised her. How can she reconcile their expectations with her reality? Did Sylvia Plath have this problem? What even is a "postcolonial novel"? And what if the story of becoming yourself is not about carving out a new identity, but learning to understand the people who made you who you are?

One

It was an undecided and hazy spring, the spring that MAS370 disappeared, and I didn't know what I was doing in London. 

Everyone kept asking me what had happened to the plane. I had become an unintentional figurehead for Malaysia Airlines. I was Australian (at least that's what it said on my blue passport) but my parents were Malaysian (red passport). And I looked like I knew something about it. 

I wished I did. All I knew was that I was lost and probably wasting my time here. 

I had been against Australia remaining a Commonwealth country and opposed to the British monarchy until I received a Commonwealth scholarship from a philanthropic organisation that had been set up in 1926 by King George V. The scholarship invited me to travel to London for a week to be 'enriched by culture' and then to Arbroath in Scotland for a month-long artist residency. Then I was going back to London to present my work at a postcolonial literature conference. Now I liked the ...

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Reviews

BookBrowse Review

BookBrowse

If Girl's identity struggles and family backstory provide the substance of the book, Sylvia Plath's work offers the structure that hosts the main character's preoccupations. But rather than simply considering how institutional racism can hamper this process for marginalized people, or the usual coming-of-age challenges on the path to self-actualization, she questions the path itself. But the Girl is a sad story in the end, in a way that hits with an unexpected jolt, shaking all its puzzle pieces into place. Yu's novel isn't about family hardships or a young woman finding her place in the world so much as an immigrant daughter recognizing her own authority, and realizing what it really means for a person to disappear...continued

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(Reviewed by Elisabeth Cook).

Media Reviews

The Guardian
Impressive... Yu remakes the art of writing itself.

Australian Book Review
Jessica Zhan Mei Yu's début novel, But the Girl...offers something more compelling than navel-gazing: a critique of classical literature, specifically the work of Sylvia Plath, through personal and academic lenses.

Publishers Weekly (starred review)
Zhan's bildungsroman brims with striking insights and fully realized characters, exploring with nuance and self-deprecating humor the fraught reality of navigating academic and artistic spaces as a woman of color. This signals the arrival of a bold new voice.

Author Blurb Brandon Taylor, author of The Late Americans
But the Girl is a vivid novel of consciousness with a delightful sense of play. Jessica Zhan Mei Yu writes with striking originality that combines the irreverent and the philosophical about the ambiguities and ambivalences of contemporary life. A wonderful new novel for a metamodern world.

Reader Reviews

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Beyond the Book



How to Read Sylvia Plath's The Bell Jar

Book cover for The Bell Jar featuring a woman's legs; she is wearing a skirt and shiny shoes with ankle strapsIn Jessica Zhan Mei Yu's novel But the Girl, the main character and first-person narrator is writing her PhD thesis on the work of Sylvia Plath. Plath is an iconic writer whose poetry is considered canonical by many but who is also sometimes dismissed as being a mere preoccupation for disillusioned teenage girls and young women. It seems reasonable to dismiss this societal view itself as sexism; Yu addresses this phenomenon in her novel and a recent interview. Still, it's undeniable that Plath has been and remains something of a rock star, susceptible to romanticization. The narrator says, "I loved Sylvia Plath because she always seemed sad and everyone loved her anyway, they even idealised her sadness as if it was a special type of ...

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