- This wonderful and challenging novel is shortlisted for the 2026 Miles Franklin Award. The winner will be announced in August. I've read most of the nominees and can confidently predict this has a real chance of winning. (Along with Randa Abdel-Fattah's amazing Discipline. Both published by the deplorable UQP. And both written by immigrants!)
- Steve MinOn's surname, with the capital O in the middle, reflects the main character's surname in the book. It's two Chinese first names meshed together because this is Australia mate! In gold rush 1878 Pan Bo Lin married an Irish woman who named him Mr Pan Bolin. Thus the origin of the Bolin family over generations.
- We're in rural Queensland. The Aussie males are blokey and racist, and fatherhood is challenging. And the women and wives are forced to obey.
- The novel has a fantasy element called Jiangshi, a state in which a dead person is also mysteriously alive and walks around observing and commenting. The main character Stephen lives in today's world as he is Pan's great grandson. Now dead, experiencing his 'interminable trek', he reflects on the abject racism he suffered painfully throughout his life. He was also gay, something foreign to his family, and was forced to keep it secret, particularly from his conservative father, Willie, who liked the newly elected Pauline Hanson, even agreeing with her that ‘we are in danger of being swamped by Asians’!
- Throughout the book as we learn of the lives of the Bolin family and their partners and kids, we are immersed in Queensland towns like Innisfail and Proserpine, and details of the politics of the times - Joh Bjelke-Petersen and Wayne Goss for example. The generational relationships are complex as there are so many brothers and sisters with children and grandchildren. (Thank god there is a dramatis personae at the beginning of the book which clarifies who's who). Despite the Bolin's Chinese heritage they all married white people. As Stephen's nephew asks at one point: 'Every marriage in a hundred years has been to someone of European or Anglo descent. Caucasian. Can you not see it? Nobody married anyone Chinese. Not even Asian, or First Nations of Pasifika or African, or...how can that be a coincidence?'
- As the decades pass families and relationships change. Steven goes to London where he finds it hard to get work and hard to adjust. Edinburgh, however, his mother’s former home, is far more comfortable. He also gets captured by the gay scene and spends most nights partying, drinking and indulging in casual sex. While there his father is diagnosed with terminal cancer. He's reluctant to come home and attend the funeral.
-Steve MinonOn has written an intriguing novel that explores so many dimensions of the complex Australian character. The prose is lucid and readable, and his observations deep and real. A novel that will stay with you for a long time.





