All That’s Left Unsaid
-
- $32.99
Publisher Description
‘A complex, harrowing look into the impacts on trauma on a community, written with the urgent pace of a thriller and peppered with moments of levity’ Vogue Australia
'An unforgettable debut, utterly compelling from start to finish. Original. Heartbreaking. Gripping. I just loved it!' Liane Moriarty
‘Poignant and impeccable storytelling’ Oprah Daily
‘An extraordinary work of Australian literature about who we are as a nation. This book deserves to be a classic in our literary canon. Profoundly moving, riveting, tender and heartbreaking. What a read. Tracey Lien is a major new voice in our literary landscape and I can’t wait to read what she writes next. Bravo’ Nikki Gemmell
* * *
There were a dozen witnesses to Denny Tran’s brutal murder in a busy Sydney restaurant. So how come no one saw anything?
‘Just let him go.’ Those are words Ky Tran will forever regret. The words she spoke when her parents called to ask if they should let her younger brother Denny out to celebrate his high school graduation. That night in 1996, Denny – optimistic, guileless, brilliant Denny – is brutally murdered inside a busy restaurant in Cabramatta, a Sydney suburb facing violent crime, an indifferent police force, and the worst heroin epidemic in Australian history.
Returning home for the funeral, Ky learns that the police are stumped by her brother’s case: several people were at Lucky 8 restaurant when Denny died, but each of the bystanders claim to have seen nothing.
As an antidote to grief and guilt, Ky is determined to track down the witnesses herself. With each encounter, she peels away another layer of the place that shaped her and Denny,exposing the trauma and seeds of violence that were planted well before that fateful celebration dinner: by colonialism, by the war in Vietnam,and by the choices they’ve all made to survive.
Tracey Lien's extraordinary debut pulls apart the intricate bonds of friendship, family, culture and community that produced a devastating crime. All That's Left Unsaid is both a study of the effects of inherited trauma and social discrimination, and a compulsively readable literary thriller that expertly holds the reader in its grip until the final page.
About the author
Born and raised in South Western Sydney, Australia, Tracey Lien earned her MFA at the University of Kansas and was previously a reporter for the Los Angeles Times. Tracey now lives in Brooklyn, New York.
All That’s Left Unsaid is her debut novel and is the winner of the Australian Indie Book Award for Debut Fiction, and the MUD Literary Prize. It has also been shortlisted for the Literary Fiction Book of the Year and The Matt Richell Award for New Writers in the ABIA Awards, as well as being a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize.
For more information about Tracey and her writing, follow her at @hellotraceylien on Instagram.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
Tracey Lien’s remarkable debut is set in 1990s Cabramatta—a dangerous suburb where heroin is cheap and plentiful, and junkies, gangsters and dealers abound. But drugs aren’t part of the Tran family culture, so the lives of main character Ky and her Vietnamese refugee parents are rocked when their brother and son, star student Denny, is murdered in a restaurant on the night of his high school graduation. When the police fail to act, Ky tries to uncover what happened to her beloved brother. Narrated by different characters throughout the chapters, Lien’s story comes to life throughout this audiobook, drawing us into a variety of viewpoints and distinctive dialogue. Lien’s expert grasp on the narrative means the past and the present are within equal reach for the characters, giving a strong sense of the way history reverberates for the Trans. All That’s Left Unsaid is about racism, intergenerational trauma and the unfairness of life, but it’s also about the motivating and binding force of love.