Another atmosphere driven book, but because I found this one more interesting than Harvest, 4 stars, not 3. The hero/antihero of this book is Shanghai, the epitome of the 21st century megalopolis, ever expanding, ever growing, glittering, energetic, and yet with pockets of an older life, a few remaining "heritage buildings." Aw shows us the incredible wealth that there is to be made in Shanghai, as well as how its poorer citizens live. Most importantly, he shows us a society constantly in motion where a meteoric rise is one step from a crushing fall, and people's lives and careers can have many such ups and downs in the space of a few years, just as old neighborhoods can disappear and new skyscrapers spring up seemingly overnight. The energy is giddy on the way up, but, with so many millions, any one can disappear, and be forgotten, if they pause or stumble even briefly. "Disappear" is a word that echos and repeats throughout the book.
I found Aw's depiction of Shanghai wholly absorbing -- I was both enchanted and horrified - he does that good a job of putting you there. He also makes Malaysia come vividly to life - whether it's the small northeastern villages and towns where each of his migrant protagonists hales from, or the more modern (but still small potatoes compared to Shanghai) KL, or even a rundown seaside estate. In Malaysia, as in Shanghai, the theme of landscapes changing - disappearing - as forest gives way to housing development, heritage building to skyscraper, is very strong.
Aw is perhaps less successful with people than he is with landscapes. He has 5 main characters (all from rural Malaysia, all seeking their fortunes in Shanghai) and while all were very interesting, some were more fully realized then others (Yinghui and Gary worked the best for me) and stereotype and caricature were sometimes a little too close at hand. For all the characters, the overriding theme is failure to connect - they grope towards each other - but fail to make true contact, and when they fail to connect, Shanghai swallows them up. Mostly that works, but some plots seem too neatly tied up, while others just leave you wondering. (I remained mystified by Walter and Pheobe's relationship - if anyone understood what Walter was up to, message me).
All in all, thoroughly engrossing - I really didn't want to put it down, and disagree with reviewers who found it too long. I have been to many places in Asia, but not mainland China, not Shanghai, partly because it seems daunting, and this book certainly did not lessen that feeling, but it also underscored that Shanghai - in energy, in wealth creation and destruction, in attraction for goods and labor from all over the world - is to the 21st century as my hometown, NY, was to the 20th. Think a visit is overdue!