Memory Piece Explained

Author:Lisa Ko
Isbn:9780593542101
Pub Date:March 19, 2024
Publisher:Riverhead Books
Memory Piece
Preceded By:The Leavers
Pages:304

Memory Piece is a 2024 novel by American writer Lisa Ko, published by Riverhead Books. It follows Asian American women growing up New York City through the dawn of the internet and toward a dystopian future.[1] Ko began writing the novel in 2016 shortly after selling the manuscript for her debut, The Leavers.[2] It was named a Best Book of 2024 by Vogue.[3]

Synopsis

The novel follows three Asian American friends who meet on the Fourth of July at a barbecue in the eighties: Giselle Chin, a performance artist; Jackie Ong, a tech entrepreneur; and Ellen Ng, a community organizer and activist. It traces their coming of age in New Jersey and New York City through the dot-com bubble and far into a dystopian future in the 2040s. The novel's title refers to Giselle's practice of writing down her memories every day and later burning them.

Critical Reception

Kirkus Reviews received the novel lukewarmly relative to Ko's debut, The Leavers, saying that it "fails to whip up much narrative tension" and that "the book’s elaborate conceptual structure dominates the characters who inhabit it."[4] Publishers Weekly found the novel's structure similarly "disjointed" but found satisfaction in the "final act in the 2040s, when America is an authoritarian police state."[5]

Many publications, like The Guardian, lauded Ko's speculative approach to modern issues like gentrification, policing, wealth inequality, and technology.[6] The New York Times called the novel "socially astute and formally innovative", as well as "giddy with women's liberation".[7] The Atlantic and The Washington Post appreciated the novel's ambition both in its subject matter and its triptych of characters.[8] [9]

Barack Obama included the novel on his 2024 summer reading list.[10]

Influences

Ko's urgency to write the novel was informed by recent concerns in the United States like book censorship and historical revisionism, as well as modern problems endemic to social media, technology, and artificial intelligence. In writing Giselle, the performance artist, Ko was drawn to the works of Tehching Hsieh, On Kawara, and Adrian Piper. Books she found particularly inspirational were The Flamethrowers by Rachel Kushner, Innocents and Others by Dana Spiotta, and After Kathy Acker by Chris Kraus.[11] Ko also researched zine culture in the nineties to inform the novel's partial setting in the early internet age.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Ko, Lisa . Memory Piece . March 19, 2024 . Riverhead Books . 2024 . 9780593542101.
  2. Web site: Yoo . Jaeyeon . 2024-04-09 . Lisa Ko on Making Memory Under Capitalism . 2024-10-26 . Electric Literature . en-US.
  3. Web site: Schama . Chloe . 2024-01-12 . The Best Books of 2024 So Far . 2024-10-26 . Vogue . en-US.
  4. Book: MEMORY PIECE Kirkus Reviews . en.
  5. Web site: Memory Piece by Lisa Ko . 2024-10-26 . www.publishersweekly.com.
  6. News: Williams . Holly . 2024-03-24 . Memory Piece by Lisa Ko review – anxiety hums off the page in dystopian New York story . 2024-10-26 . The Observer . en-GB . 0029-7712.
  7. News: Jacobs . Alexandra . March 24, 2024 . For Girlhood Friends, the Tech Revolution Is a Dividing Line . The New York Times.
  8. Web site: Meyer . Lily . 2024-03-27 . The Impossible Fight to Live the Life You Want . 2024-10-26 . The Atlantic . en.
  9. News: McGuire . Nneka . March 16, 2024 . A novel as ambitious as a 'Great British Baking' showstopper . The Washington Post.
  10. Web site: 2024-08-12 . All of the books on Barack Obama's 2024 summer reading list . 2024-10-26 . TODAY.com . en.
  11. Web site: Zhang . Cat . 2024-03-27 . Lisa Ko’s Memory Piece Is for the ‘Asian American Art Weirdos’ . 2024-10-26 . The Cut . en.