You won't find this formulation in so many words, but the suggestion is strong that it's Jacob's sexuality that makes him a mark for Satan. It's the darkest possible secret, but Han deftly prepares the reader for the idea, with insinuations as early as page 22 and subsequent more detailed stories of Jacob's trysts, all of them sad. What makes Jacob -whose name salutes the Biblical antihero who wrestles with god in the form of an angel- an outcast in a family of outliers is that he is gay. Their all-too-literally twisted relationship is a constant marvel to watch, corporeality doing battle with transpersonal forces in which destiny and everyday emotional manipulation mingle uneasily. But Tae-woo is a whiner, ruminating on "how nice it must have been to have a male heir." "Some ghosts were strong enough to inhabit the living while they slept, to get their relatives to sleepwalk around their homes, never farther," Han continues. The closest Tae-woo comes to "favor" for Jacob is an all-body, Job-like rash. "Tae-woo didn't participate in daily life like other ghosts, especially the South Koreans who remained in the lives of their progeny, on self-appointed duty as karmic enforcers bringing favor or crafting luck for their kin wherever they could," Han writes. There's little that's ethereal about their connection, and the reader is given gripping accounts of what it's actually like to be inside another spirit. What's astounding in Han's story is the degree to which the two men are aware of one another. Granddad's fate is to become literally stuck in a fissure in the wall separating the newly divided nation in a desperate act of remorse, return, and hoped renewal.īut well before he makes his literal run for it, he insinuates the spirit -and, critically, it returns out, body- of grandson Jacob, who, largely uncomprehendingly, is dragged from the comparative safety of his parents' chosen refuge, Hawaii, to South Korea, where of course he teaches English to Koreans puzzled by his Korean-ness. A setup for abandonment and inter-generational guilt, it works like a charm. Like many other nominal heads of family at the time, Grandpa Tae-woo left embattled North Korea to seek safe harbor for his family in the South, promising to come back for them when that mission was accomplished. Joseph, it turns out, is haunted by the spirit of his grandfather. As big a deal in Western as in Asian literature, that narrative staple -seemingly as old as story-telling itself- would seem to have run its course, gone past its sell-by date, for us more enlightened, science-worshiping, post-Hiroshima critters.īut a ghost story is the unapologetic core of "Nuclear Family" and its single greatest achievement. The unalloyed genius of "Nuclear Family" is not just its use of but improvement on the venerable ghost story. Everyone, reader included, is left to re-orient around this news, but it's hardly a spoiler to note that, as early as page 75, the author has recruited a ghost to explain everything, not that he leaves all the talk-story to the phantom. Immigrant proprietors of Cho's Delicatessen in Honolulu, the father, Appa, and mother, Umma, spawn two children, Korean-born Jacob and American-born Grace, who bring new meaning to the term offspring.Īs we meet them, the misfit and puer eternus Joseph has been shot attempting to cross the DMZ -yes, the Korean peninsula's 38th parallel- heading north, not south. It wouldn't qualify as an Asian American Bildungsroman without a central obsession with family, and Han deals out a doozie with the Chos. But it's a feint in the novel, too, one of several baffling anticlimaxes that pull the rug out from under the 33-year-old, South Korean-born, Honolulu-resident author, who has other fish to fry, often literally. Such as Han's novel indulges an actual nuclear incident, it's the 2018 alert of an incoming nuclear missile in Hawaii -false, it turned out, but no less disconcerting for its "This is not a drill" Dr. Joseph Han's first novel, "Nuclear Family" (Counterpoint Press), explodes it, leaving you with the spectacle of the mushroom cloud. Since Hiroshima, the concept has proven too ripe not to be nuked, and sly references to "my nuclear family" today are almost certainly charges of wanton destruction rather than emotional bliss. The sociological construct of "nuclear family," signifying a familial unit whose members all live together, is nearly a century old.