A Map for the Missing, a Conversation with Belinda Huijuan Tang

NüVoices

NüVoices
A Map for the Missing, a Conversation with Belinda Huijuan Tang
Oct 19, 2022
NüVoices

"I think a lot of the ways that Chinese people are talked about are as these passive receptors of historical events, people that things happen to, rather than people who have agency in their own lives and who make decisions in their own lives... So I wanted to write a book that was about characters living through momentous, historical times, but I didn't want their entire personhoods to feel like they were defined by those times." 

This week, we talk to Belinda Huijuan Tang about her debut novel, A Map for the Missing, which was recently longlisted for the Center for Fiction's First Novel prize. Belinda talks about her writing and research process, and her focus on telling a Chinese story from a personal, domestic vantage point rather than a political one.  This episode is hosted and edited by Megan Cattel.

About A Map for the Missing: "Tang Yitian has been living in America for almost a decade when he receives an urgent phone call from his mother: his father has disappeared from the family’s rural village in China. Though they have been estranged for years, Yitian promises to come home.

When Yitian attempts to piece together what may have happened, he struggles to navigate China’s impenetrable bureaucracy as an outsider, and his mother’s evasiveness only deepens the mystery. So he seeks out a childhood friend who may be in a position to help: Tian Hanwen, the only other person who shared Yitian’s desire to pursue a life of knowledge.

Reuniting for the first time as adults, Yitian and Hanwen embark on the search for Yitian’s father, all the while grappling with the past—who Yitian’s father really was, and what might have been. Spanning the late 1970s to 1990s and moving effortlessly between rural provinces and big cities, A Map for the Missing is a deeply felt examination of family and forgiveness, and the meaning of home."