By one of Southeast Asia's most exciting writers, The Age of
Goodbyes is a wildly inventive account of family history, political
turmoil, and the redemptive grace of storytelling.
In 1969, in the wake of Malaysia's deadliest race riots, a woman named
Du Li An secures her place in society by marrying a gangster. In a
parallel narrative, a critic known only as The Fourth Person explores
the work of a writer also named Du Li An. And a third storyline is in
the second person; "you" are reading a novel titled The Age of
Goodbyes. Floundering in the wake of "your" mother's death, "you" are
trying to unpack the secrets surrounding "your" lineage.
The Age of Goodbyes--which begins on page 513, a reference to the
riots of May 13, 1969--is the acclaimed debut by Li Zi Shu. The winner
of multiple awards and a Taiwanese bestseller, this dazzling novel is a
profound exploration of what happens to personal memory when official
accounts of history distort and render it taboo.