From Publishers Weekly
Despite their hip exteriors, the four Toronto 20-somethings at the heart of Brand's solid novel all struggle with issues of race and identity. Tuyen, a lesbian artist, is the daughter of Vietnamese immigrants who still grieve for the son they lost in Vietnam. Carla, a biracial woman, grapples with a misplaced sense of responsibility for her younger brother, Jamal, whose rap sheet is more than Carla can fix. Oku struggles under the watchful, and often resentful, eye of his father, a Jamaican immigrant who feels both threatened and frustrated by his son's poetic aspiration. Jackie, a young black woman whose family came to Toronto from Halifax, vicariously mourns the loss of her parents' youthful dreams. Although the friends have an unspoken rule never to talk of family, the problems of home spill inevitably into their daily lives, culminating in an explosive moment when the families finally meet. Brand's slice-of-life style is often at odds with her melodramatic subject matter. But the emotional depth of her characters provides original insight on the young urban dweller.
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Review
“Superb . . . Brand’s best novel yet.”—National Post
“Brand . . . translates our desires and experiences into a language, an art that allows [her] to voice that which we live, but could not utter or bring to voice until she did so for us.”
—The Globe and Mail
“Brand’s most accomplished novel yet. . . . both credible and incredible.” —Quill & Quire
"Brand is quite subtle and nuanced in her analysis of her characters." --
Toronto Star "...a wonderfully layered and polyphonic novel...[Brand's] writing enfolds a generosity or openness that enables it to transcend its 'artifice.' These qualities are on display in abundance in this moving novel of how families, histories and geographies shape the nature of dreams." --
Vue Weekly (Edmonton) "What We All Long For is a watershed novel." --
National Post "Brand's text is gifted with unavoidable questions of what partnership means." --
Herizons
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