The Silence that Binds Us
eBook - ePub

The Silence that Binds Us

  1. 368 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The Silence that Binds Us

About this book

“A grieving teen fights Asian hate by finding her voice in this complex, timely story.” —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"With a layered, sensitive voice, Ho’s weighty novel delves into themes of racism, classism, loss, and healing." —Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“Inspired by the recent rise in hate crimes against AAPI, Ho’s story of inclusion, diversity, and social action rings true. Maybelline is a multifaceted narrator whose drive to right wrongs and stand up to injustice deserves applause. Ho illuminates both activism and mental health in marginalized communities, showing that even a bright, young achiever can experience depression without anyone knowing.” —ALA Booklist

"A powerful, hopeful YA debut. May’s journey through personal and familial grief is poignant and questions of power and privilege are explored with nuance that will spark conversation among teen readers." —School Library Journal

“This sensitive novel does an impressive balancing act, examining mental illness and its stigma among Asian Americans while weaving in themes of racism and grief. The overarching messages—listening with empathy and seeking help—ring loud and clear.” —The Horn Book

Joanna Ho, New York Times bestselling author of Eyes That Kiss in the Corners, has written an exquisite, heart-rending debut young adult novel that will inspire all to speak truth to power.

Maybelline Chen isn’t the Chinese Taiwanese American daughter her mother expects her to be. May prefers hoodies over dresses and wants to become a writer. When asked, her mom can’t come up with one specific reason for why she's proud of her only daughter. May’s beloved brother, Danny, on the other hand, has just been admitted to Princeton. But Danny secretly struggles with depression, and when he dies by suicide, May's world is shattered.

In the aftermath, racist accusations are hurled against May's parents for putting too much “pressure” on him. May’s father tells her to keep her head down. Instead, May challenges these ugly stereotypes through her writing. Yet the consequences of speaking out run much deeper than anyone could foresee. Who gets to tell our stories, and who gets silenced? It’s up to May to take back the narrative.

Joanna Ho masterfully explores timely themes of mental health, racism, and classism. 

A Bank Street Books Best Children's Book of the Year for ages 14 and older in Family/School/Community and noted for outstanding merit (2023)

A 2025 Evergreen Teen Book Award nominee

A 20252026 Virginia Readers' Choice Award nominee

"An ornately carved window into the core of shared humanity. Read and reread. Then read it again." —Nic Stone, New York Times bestselling author of Dear Martin

"Powerful and piercing, filled with truth, love, and a heroine who takes back the narrative." —Abigail Hing Wen, New York Times bestselling author of Loveboat, Taipei

“A held-breath of a novel that finds courage amidst brokenness and holds a candle to the dark.” —Stacey Lee, New York Times bestselling author of The Downstairs Girl

“Ho confronts racism with care and nuance, capturing the complexities of grief and growth. A poignant call to action.” —Randy Ribay, National Book Award finalist for Patron Saints of Nothing

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Information

Publisher
HarperCollins
Year
2022
Print ISBN
9780063059351
eBook ISBN
9780063059368
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1

My mom has her own personal arsenal of silence, and she wields it like the Force, bending me to her will. Her silence can be a flashing yellow light, warning me to proceed with caution, or a magnifying glass she uses to study me like I’m some kind of alien species. Most often, her silence is a hippo, pregnant with disappointment. She can brandish that hippo at me while gracefully hosting a dinner party, chatting up guests, and offering them tea.
Which is what she did on the night Danny died.
Just as the Wus arrived for dinner, Danny bounded down the stairs with all the grace of a six-foot water buffalo in basketball shorts, bellowing, “May-May! Have you seen my Star Wars socks?” He froze when he saw the Wus, then burst out laughing. “Everyone loves Star Wars, right?” Then he whipped around and ran back up to his room. He was extra scatterbrained his last few months, which was a little weird.
My mom emerged from the kitchen, perfectly pressed, with pearls of steam glistening in her hair. She just shook her head and laughed.
Her eyes flitted over to me, taking in my usual ripped jeans and hair, a cinnamon roll splat on top of my head. I was wearing my nicest hoodie, but that didn’t stop my mom’s right eyebrow from twitching, though her smile never wavered as she greeted our guests. “
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She didn’t say anything to me.
I glanced at Celeste, who of course looked perfect. Her hair glistened in a silky, straight waterfall down her back. She wore a loose black dress that hit modestly above her knees, the shapeless kind that would look like a potato sack on me but made her look like a model. Celeste had a figure made for qipao: slender, tiny really, with just the slightest suggestions of curves in all the right places.
When my mom greeted her, Celeste smiled, dipped her head, and said, “
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, Āyí.” Her Mandarin didn’t have the telltale ABC accent; it sounded like she grew up in Taiwan.
Five minutes later, Danny came back down the stairs, dressed this time and still chuckling. “Hi, Uncle. Hi, Āyí. Hey, Celeste.”
Pink cherry blossoms bloomed on Celeste’s cheeks and I rolled my eyes. You and every other girl at school, I thought. My mom made a sucking sound against her teeth and cut her eyes over at me.
While my dad herded everyone into the dining room, I slipped upstairs and changed into a pair of skinny high-waisted jeans and a cream-colored cardigan with lacy detail on the sleeves. My mom got it for me a while ago and I hadn’t even taken the tags off. Because, not a hoodie. I brushed my hair, but it stuck out in haywire angles from being twisted up all day, so I tied it back up carefully, attempting to wrap it into a neat knot.
When I walked back into the dining room, tugging at the edge of my cardigan, Danny coughed into his noodles and arched his eyebrow at me. I gave him a death stare and he stifled a smile by blowing determinedly on his steaming bowl of niú ròu miàn.
My mom set a bowl in front of me and said, “
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It was too hot to eat, but too tempting to wait. The meat was so tender it melted as it touched my tongue. In between bites and burned mouths, everyone praised my mom for the beef noodle soup. She tried not to look too pleased and said, “
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It’s only okay. I forgot to make the suāncài so it’s not as good today.” Then she changed the subject. “How’s school, Celeste?”
Celeste looked up, chopsticks frozen in the act of depositing noodles into her mouth. “It’s good, Āyí.”
Auntie Wu jumped in. “I heard you did very well on your math test last week, May.”
“Not as well as Celeste,” my mom said. “I heard she got the top score!”
Celeste shifted uncomfortably. I don’t know where my mom gets her information, but she has her ways, and she takes a special interest in math because she’s an engineer. It’s just another reason for her to summon that pregnant hippo. Math is whatever to me; I’d rather be writing.
My mom directed her praise to Uncle and Auntie Wu. “
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“She stays up so late to study, sometimes we worry about her,” said Auntie Wu, shaking her head. “I say to her, ‘Go to sleep or you will ruin your eyes.’ But she just keeps working.”
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Studying hard is a good thing.”
“I tell her to relax a little. An A-minus never killed anyone!” Uncle Wu laughed and looked at my dad. “If I’d ever brought home an A-minus, my mom would have thrown me a party.”
“You couldn’t have afforded the bribe to get an A-minus. You spent more time in the principal’s office than in class,” my dad retorted. They looked at each other and laughed harder, past memories filling the space between their eyes.
Uncle Wu and dad grew up together in San Francisco’s Chinatown. When Uncle Wu came over, they slipped in and out between Cantonese and English—amphibians of language comfortable in both habitats. I loved seeing my dad morph into his teenage self: the swagger, the laughter, the slang all came back when Uncle Wu was around.
“What would Joe think of us now, all cleaned up? With kids?” Uncle Wu said while slurping up a bite of noodles. “He wouldn’t believe it.”
“He’d love it.” My dad’s smile drooped as he looked toward the living room, where a faded picture of Uncle Joe sat on a bookshelf. “This is all because of him.”
“Ai-yah, you were such troublemakers,” said my mom, tilting the subject back toward humor with her mock exasperation. “I’m glad I met you after your Chinatown days.”
She started scooping more noodles and soup into our bowls. I shook my head a little and croaked, “I’m good, Ma. I’m full.”
“Full? You barely ate, Maybelline.” My name was my mom’s idea. When she was a young graduate, fresh out of Taiwan’s top university, she saw a commercial for Maybelline makeup products that sang, “Maybe it’s Maybelline.” She thought it sounded beautiful and refined, everything she hoped her future daughter would become.
She’s the only one who actually calls me by my full name.
My mom tried to sound chipper in front of our guests, but chipper on my mom is like a fake tan on a Minnesotan in winter. As she ladled soup and meat into my bowl, she said, “I thought niú ròu miàn was your favorite.” Her eyes flashed a silent warning: Don’t embarrass me.
I really was stuffed but gave up protesting. It’s just safer to keep my mouth shut. Every time I retreat into my cave of silence, I spruce the place up. At this point, I’ve basically decorated myself a room complete with Pocky, books, a couple leafy plants, and a bed. I’m comfortable here.
As everyone tucked into beef noodle soup, round two, my mom looked up like she’d just thought of something, though I got the sense she’d been waiting for this moment all day. She said, “Danny, tell everyone the news!”
Auntie Wu sat up. “
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! Wasn’t today the day that—”
Danny’s eyes widened, and I glimpsed a flash of something drowning behind them. He choked. “Not now, Ma.”
“Now is a perfect time! We’re like family here.”
Danny stared for a long second at his noodle bowl, then rearranged his face so quickly that no one else noticed. He said, “I got into Princeton.” He smiled and showed the high dimple on his right cheek—it always looked as if someone had pinned it out of place.
Congratulations burst around the table, and someone asked, “Did you hear from Stanford yet?” Danny shook his head. He kept smiling, but his dimple faded. He looked lost as he disappeared beneath best wishes and well-intentioned questions.
I watched him closely and frowned. Something was wrong. I tried to catch his eye, but he wouldn’t look at me. He knew I was trying to telegraph a million questions to his brain.
“We have some exciting news to share too,” said Auntie Wu, looking at her daughter. Celeste gave her mom a look that said, Shut up, Mom, and shook her head faintly. Auntie Wu kept talking. “Celeste was accepted into a summer internship program at Google! It is supposed to be for graduating seniors, but she got in even though she’ll only be a junior next year.”
Auntie Wu practically exploded out of her skin she was so dang proud. My mom clasped her hands, a speechless smile spread across her face. She never looked at me that way, a lantern glowing with pride. That look was always saved for Celeste.
“May,
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? What will you be doing this summer?” asked Auntie Wu.
The smell of jasmine wafted beneath my nose as Celeste looked down and refilled teacups around the table before pouring...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Dedication
  4. Contents
  5. Chapter 1
  6. Chapter 2
  7. Chapter 3
  8. Chapter 4
  9. Chapter 5
  10. Chapter 6
  11. Chapter 7
  12. Chapter 8
  13. Chapter 9
  14. Chapter 10
  15. Chapter 11
  16. Chapter 12
  17. Chapter 13
  18. Chapter 14
  19. Chapter 15
  20. Chapter 16
  21. Chapter 17
  22. Chapter 18
  23. Chapter 19
  24. Chapter 20
  25. Chapter 21
  26. Chapter 22
  27. Chapter 23
  28. Chapter 24
  29. Chapter 25
  30. Chapter 26
  31. Chapter 27
  32. Chapter 28
  33. Chapter 29
  34. Chapter 30
  35. Chapter 31
  36. Chapter 32
  37. Chapter 33
  38. Chapter 34
  39. Chapter 35
  40. Chapter 36
  41. Chapter 37
  42. Chapter 38
  43. Chapter 39
  44. Chapter 40
  45. Chapter 41
  46. Chapter 42
  47. Chapter 43
  48. Chapter 44
  49. Chapter 45
  50. Chapter 46
  51. Chapter 47
  52. Chapter 48
  53. Chapter 49
  54. Chapter 50
  55. Chapter 51
  56. Chapter 52
  57. Chapter 53
  58. Chapter 54
  59. Chapter 55
  60. Chapter 56
  61. Chapter 57
  62. Chapter 58
  63. Chapter 59
  64. Chapter 60
  65. Chapter 61
  66. Chapter 62
  67. Chapter 63
  68. Chapter 64
  69. Chapter 65
  70. Chapter 66
  71. Chapter 67
  72. Chapter 68
  73. Chapter 69
  74. Chapter 70
  75. Chapter 71
  76. Chapter 72
  77. Chapter 73
  78. Chapter 74
  79. Chapter 75
  80. Chapter 76
  81. Chapter 77
  82. Chapter 78
  83. Epilogue
  84. Author’s Note
  85. Acknowledgments
  86. Resources
  87. About the Author
  88. Books by Joanna Ho
  89. Back Ad
  90. Copyright
  91. About the Publisher