Alex
asked
Celeste Ng:
Hi Celeste! Everything I Never Told You helped me through a very similar time in which I played a role similar to James in my family. It filled me with pride as a biracial Asian to see the representation your novel brought about, and wanted to ask what do you think it will take for more diverse works like yours to receive such widespread acclaim and attention?
Celeste Ng
This is something really important to me. I hope that publishing--and the reading public--is starting to see the value of having many different works by many different kinds of writers, of all backgrounds. I think a lot about Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's talk about the "single story"--you can see it here (https://www.ted.com/talks/chimamanda_... how representation is more than a series of checkboxes, it's a real plurality of viewpoints. As a writer who's had some success, I see my job as advocating for more writers to get to tell *their* stories--in other words, making more seats at the table. Those of us who've gotten the spotlight, in other words, have a duty to try and share it with others.
More Answered Questions
Emily M
asked
Celeste Ng:
Hi Celeste -- An early congrats on the release of your paperback edition! As a reader, I am often torn by my love of thrillers and my high admiration of literary fiction. I was very taken by your book, which has obvious mystery-like components but the nuance of a work that is truly literary. Which books and writers do you think have most influenced your writing style?
Adelaide Metzger
asked
Celeste Ng:
I'm sure you hear this a lot, but I want to say thank you for writing such an amazing and visceral book. 'Everything I Never Told You' changed the way I read forever and I now tell people that it's definitely a "Must Read Before You Die" book. My question was: Do you have any other books in mind that you've always wanted to get published? And will there be any more of your books published soon? Thank you :)
karina
asked
Celeste Ng:
This question contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[
Hi Celeste, I just finished "Everything I Never Told You". As the daughter of an Asian mother and white father I painfully related to Lydia – especially when she recalls what "it is like" to Jack. Thank you for that. I don't have a very good question, just something small that's been keeping me awake at night. Does Nath learn that Jack has loved him all this time? The end hints at yes, but I need to know for sure.
(hide spoiler)]
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