Novelist Juniper (June) Hayword, 27, is having a late drink with her more beautiful and much more successful writer friend of 9 years, Athena Liu, when Athena chokes and dies, despite June's Heimlich attempts. They met at Yale. Juniper takes Athena's just-completed manuscript, gets it accepted and with editor Daniella's help produces version without Athena's pretention, tragedy porn and obscurity. "The Last Front" is about the plight of Chinese volunteers in WW1 Normandy. She reads the source material, tries to learn Mandarin, and exagerates the depth of her friendship with Athena in case people doubt her authorship or see signs of Athena's style.
She publishes the book as Juniper Song (the middle name her hippy mother gave her). She turns down the option of using a sensitivity reader. The book's a big success. She sees Athena's ghost at a reading. She'd seen how Athena was transformed into a celeb (bio details cherry-picked) and feels it happen to herself. Adverse crits and accusations pour in. @AthenaLiusGhost's posts are the most upsetting. People rake through her old, offhand posts seek evidence. Support arrives later. People start attacking Athena's ethnic credentials - she used "almond-shaped eyes". June discovers that @AthenaLiusGhost is Geoff - Athena's white ex whose first novel flopped. Athena had talked to him about "The Last Front". June calls his bluff when he tries to blackmail her. Someone posts that "This book is so racist that it's obvious only a white person could have written it". We learn that Athena stole words from her for a student mag story.
After pressure for a follow-up she produces a novella, "Mother Witch", that starts with a sentence or 2 of Athena's then is about her (June's) mum. It gets respectful reviews. Then posts appear from others saying that they have the same sentence or 2 - Athena shared them at a workshop. The posts speculate on how much of the rest of the story was original.
Athena's mum still had Athena's notebooks. She doesn't want to read/reveal them in case they're embarrassing. Right-wing organisations support June. Her sales rise again. She wonders whether to give up writing, but she needs it. To conquer writers block she goes observing - real life becomes plot-twists. Her agent suggests IP work. She goes back to teaching and is inspired (she'd forgotten that writing could be a communal activity), but realises she's adapting students' ideas. She picks on a student who wonders whether June killed Athena and stole her manuscript. She goes to her mother's house, where she grew up. Her mother's going to sell it. June's old notebooks are there. Her mother wants her to retrain as an accountant. Somebody posts a review of her book, showing in detail how it seems to be written by 2 people. She's suddenly inspired to write when she has the idea of writing up the true story - something much like "Yellowface".
Anthena's account revives. June asks for a meeting. At night, at the top of steps, June converses with Athena's voice, confesses. Actually it's Candice, who lost her publishing job because of June. Candice has it all video-recorded. They fight. June wakes up in hospital. She realises that Candice can't reveal the video evidence without risking assault charges. She works out how to portray her book at a hoax and expose the rotten foundation of the publishing industry.
I enjoyed it - I understood most of the in-jokes and recognised the character types. June's sister Rory (Aurora), mentioned near the start, gets to speak briefly, half way through. She's an ordinary mother. I don't know why she's in the book at all.
The author has a MPhil from Cambridge, UK. I learnt that "barcons" are bar gathering at literary events.
Other reviews
- Anthony Cummins (it’s a thriller about the book trade – the appeal is niche – and you can sense Kuang’s uncertainty about what does and doesn’t need explaining)
- Wamuwi Mbao (ultimately as much about the loneliness of the writing craft as it is about theft, appropriation, guilt and complicity ... June is always close to grasping what the reader immediately perceives about herself and Athena: that, regardless of who succeeds and who fails, they are united by the loneliness of their chosen lives ... there are structural problems that take the polish off the novel. While Kuang is good at sustaining the vivid tension-and-reveal tempo, there are only so many times the fizzing fuse can be deployed before the reader’s patience begins to wear thin. ... The other problem is one of time stretch.... Yellowface manages the trick of feeling current, but there are moments of timeline yo-yo that tangle and pull at our suspension of reality)
- Brenna Taitano (when I completed my first listen, I agreed with some of the more negative reviews: hastily ended chapters, foreboding that never gets addressed, and weak metaphors. )
- Trevor Pateman (Kuang has a lot of fun and makes us laugh though there is sufficient (and clever) ambiguity to allow opposing sides to laugh at the same gags)
Poems from "And Other Poems", "Magma", "The North", "Under the Radar", etc. The poems are roughly grouped into themes - family, garden/nature, memories of school, arts, jobs, objects/events that trigger memories, etc. When she read from her book on 1st Mar, 2026 I think she read p.11, 13, 32, 46, 50, 64, and 68.