The San Francisco Bay Area is filled with people who have not or do not fit in. Because they are too smart, or socially awkward, or part of a gender or racial minority group, or an immigrant. Many of them, even if successful, still carry this feeling but need to pretend they don’t.
Most of them are there to pursue their version of the American Dream, through silicon or software, media or some new consumer good or service. The culture that arises from the mix of these people, is shaped by their companies, the media that cover them can be very odd and amusing even to the people who have lived there for years.
In her second novel, Kathy Wang writes about two women in the same large tech company (Tangerine) who would normally rarely interact - Julia the Russian COO/spy, and Alice the American born Chinese technical support engineer.
Julia, the COO, was raised in a Russian orphanage where her ambition attracted the attention of her eventual spy handler who helped her to found a tech company using stolen face recognition technology. Her startup was later purchased by Tangerine, where she became its COO. As a spy, she would pass along interesting, incriminating information about other CEOs, politicians and former Russian oligarchs who pissed off the wrong person in power.
Alice, a support engineer at a secure messaging company that Tangerine also acquired, notices some strange server activity and slowly comes to realize that Julia, the COO, is behind it. It turns out that Julia has access to an account with an almost unlimited “God mode” which she uses for the Russian spy agency and her own personal and professional interests. Alice follows the hints that Julia has left behind and risks her job to catch Julia when others either don’t see it or don’t care. Alice’s insistence on pursuing this is driven by her desire for justice after suffering all the micro- and macro-aggressions she’s experienced as an Asian female and the attack on her mother that happened when she was a child.
When Alice was eight, she was in the dry cleaners where her mother was working when two privileged boys from the local highschool got drunk and decided to rob the store. When they found out that there was only forty dollars in the register, they hit her mother with a backpack full of previously stolen vodka and after her mother hit her head on the counter, the boys ran away leaving her bleeding on the floor. They were caught by the police but only had to apologize with their parents’ lawyer and do twenty hours of community service. As Alice grows older, she is upset that her mother didn’t demand more punishment for the two boys. Her mother didn’t want to make waves, she told her daughter that the wealthy have their own problems and they would get their lessons later.
We also find out more about Julia’s time growing up in an orphanage in Russia after being abandoned at seven by her newly widowed mother. Julia realizes that the only way to get out is to pretend to be exceptionally bright. She isn’t as bright as she pretends - but she is exceptionally driven and hardworking and these are the things that drives her to the top of Tangerine. Because she is a spy, Julia can’t make any friends and is constantly judged as a powerful woman in a leadership position and has to defend herself from the media, her subordinates in Tangerine as well as from other Russian spies.
Kathy Wang’s ethnographic detachment as she describes her character’s various habits reminds me of Kazuo Ishuguro’s when he describes the childrens art and interests in Never Let Me Go. Her style is the most funny when she writes about her characters’ purchases and hobbies -- a lot of times they are a way for these people to fit in with a group of like minded consumers. Her observations dance back and forth across the line between truth and absurdity. Julia’s often funny but uncharitable thoughts about everyone seem excessively paranoid, but as she uses her God like access to read their emails and instant messages, she inevitably finds out her suspicions are true.
In my first reading, I found that I was rushing to find out what happened. In my second, I was able to slow down and savor the author’s observations about her characters and the silliness and awfulness of life in the Bay Area. As an Asian woman, I also reflected on the way that Alice and her mother responded to the racism in their lives. With the violence against Asians reported in the news right now, I feel like it is time to be less quiet to do more and to say more. In both of Kathy’s books, she writes about the limits of many Asian parents' formulae of just working hard in achieving the American dream.