Bury What We Cannot Take is a vital book.”. “Bury What We Cannot Take fulfills the promise of Kirstin Chen’s debut. San San’s family flee Drum Wave Islet, leaving her behind. An epic story follows that explores gender roles, oppressive ideologies, sacrifice, and what it means to be free.4/5(32). “Bury What We Cannot Take explores what it takes to survive in a world gone mad—and what is lost when we do. Kirstin Chen has written both an engrossing historical drama and a nuanced exploration of how far the bonds of familial love can stretch.”. “Bury What We Cannot Take explores what it takes to survive in a world gone mad—and what is lost when we do. Kirstin Chen has written both an engrossing historical drama and a nuanced exploration of how far the bonds of familial love can stretch.” —Celeste Ng, New York Times bestselling author of Everything I Never Told You and Little Fires Everywhere/5().
Kirstin Chen. Author of BURY WHAT WE CANNOT TAKE. Home; Bio; Books. Bury What We Cannot Take; Soy Sauce for Beginners; Contact. Dislocation disrupts home and family in San Francisco-based author Kirstin Chen's second novel, "Bury What We Cannot Take" (Little A, $, pages). Alienation, disorientation, betrayal. Bury What We Cannot Take | Chapter 11 of 50 Author: Kirstin Chen | Submitted by: Maria Garcia | Views | Add a Review Please hit next button if you encounter an empty page.
KIRSTIN CHEN is the author of the novels Bury What We Cannot Take, forthcoming from Little A in , and Soy Sauce for Beginners, a Kindle First selection, an O, The Oprah Magazine “book to pick up now,” and a Glamour book club pick. “Bury What We Cannot Take explores what it takes to survive in a world gone mad—and what is lost when we do. Kirstin Chen has written both an engrossing historical drama and a nuanced exploration of how far the bonds of familial love can stretch.” —Celeste Ng, New York Times bestselling author of Everything I Never Told You and Little Fires Everywhere. “Bury What We Cannot Take explores what it takes to survive in a world gone mad—and what is lost when we do. Kirstin Chen has written both an engrossing historical drama and a nuanced exploration of how far the bonds of familial love can stretch.”.
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