Told with deadpan humor and brutal honesty, this debut novel follows Vietnamese American Linh Lyβs unraveling as she reckons with the traumas of both her past and present, perfect for fans ofΒ Joan Is OkayΒ andΒ Luster.
When twenty-seven-year-old Linh Lyβs recently divorced mother begins dating a coworker, Linh is determined to make sure he is worthy of her mother. Sheβs seen the kind of men her motherΒ ends up withβshe grew up watching her unreliable and volatile alcoholic father as her mother worked two jobs to make ends meet. Linh is certain that her mother canβt do this on her own, but what begins as genuine worry quickly turns obsessive.
Following her mother and spying on her dates becomes part of Linhβs routine, especially after aΒ universityΒ shooting at LinhβsΒ workΒ that leaves her feeling adriftβat least her momβs dating life gives her something to focus on. Linh doesnβt exactly have a life of her own (dating or otherwise) and figures the best course of action isΒ actionβnotΒ howΒ she handled the shooting: curl up in a ball and wait it out.
Linh is slowly forced to reconcile the image of her mother from her childhood with the woman sheβs getting to know as an adult. Growing up Vietnamese in the middle of Texas with a broken household taught Linh a certain guardedΒ wayΒ of livingβone she never quite left behind.
Moving, insightful, and caustically funny all at once,Β Linh Ly Is Doing Just FineΒ depicts aΒ quarter-life crisisΒ in deeply relatable prose.