It is almost unimaginable that Sam Meekings is a young, debut author. His innate, shimmering talent is steady and captivating throughout the novel, the characters are riveting, and the story itself is painfully soulful. With as much history as he conveyed in this story, you would think that at times, it would be flawed with a "researched" tone. But, no. He threaded the history, story, and characters together with magical stitches, and he laced it with myth and folktales that enhanced the story with awe and beauty.
The narrator is the Kitchen God. He made a bet with the Jade Emperor that he can divine the workings of the human heart. Each chapter is entitled with a symbol of the Chinese zodiac and is prefaced with a conversation between the two, and each conversation is like an ancient proverb that underscores the story.
The main characters are Yuying and Jinyi, and this book is their love story. When I think of them, I think of the love between Dr. Zhivago and Lara. I know that the latter are western, and it is a different story altogether, but this love is epic and enduring like that. It is the story of love under the most atrocious conditions, a love that threatens to collapse at times, but the human heart prevails over history, torture, and political oppression. How? That is what the Kitchen God is there to mine.
As their love story begins, the Japanese invasion is ending. The narrator refers to this second Sino-Japanese War as a time in history when the Chinese took a time out from their many civil wars in order to band together to resist the Japanese. It is no wonder that communism controlled the country in the subsequent era, a kind of recoil from Japanese imperialism.
Yuying is from a wealthy family with servants and would have lived in even more luxury if it weren't for her father's bad habits. Yuying's father is a shameless boor who has his own agenda for forcing Yuying to marry Jinyi, a lowly kitchen employee at one of his restaurants. But Jinyi is a tough and virtuous man, despite the fact that his introduction to his employment was stealing a morsel of food to abate hunger.
A year or so after they are married, Junjyi wants to take Yuying back to his home, the place where he grew up but was mistreated by his aunt and uncle. This journey was long, arduous, and the beginning of their hardship. Later, The Gang of Four come to power with the Cultural Revolution--a decade of turbulence, chaos, and propaganda so deep that even children were turning their parents in for seditious behavior, and people were frightened of saying anything that would be considered a dissent from the communist doctrine of Mao Zedong. The effect of Mao's brand of communism on Yuying and Jinyi was paramount to the struggles of their relationship, and even created an inner dialectic that often muddled their own inner truths and core beliefs.
"Have you ever dreamed of being invisible? It is easy, Jinyi thought. Turn your eyes to the ground while others are speaking. Be thin in a land of skeletons; be hungry around a man and his meal. Be hunched around the straight backs of men with medals and insignia; be dry among the drunk. Be a country boy in the crowded streets of the city...it is the unseen masses who knot the country together, the busy atoms rushing unseen between slow bodies."
Starvation, devastation, violence, oppression, and death are the cruel enemies of their marriage, a time so deeply tested that the act of survival would seem to eclipse love. But perseverance through suffering and forbearance through agony are the qualities of this couple that beguile the beguiling Kitchen God, and further entice the reader.
The author defines a sense of place, of culture, and of food, even the absence of food, within a seamless and lyrical narrative that induces an almost dreamlike state of mind when reading. The prose is aphoristic and poetic, and the pacing is flawless. This is a novel that appeals on many levels--aesthetic, historical, and political, and much more. Meekings has achieved the luminous art of storytelling.