Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Our Missing Hearts
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
143 posts | 136 read | 4 reading | 74 to read
From the number one bestselling author of Little Fires Everywhere, a deeply suspenseful and heartrending novel about the unbreakable love between a mother and child in a society consumed by fear Twelve-year-old Bird Gardner lives a quiet existence with his loving but broken father, a former linguist who now shelves books in Harvard University's library. Bird knows to not ask too many questions, stand out too much, or stray too far. For a decade, their lives have been governed by laws written to preserve "American culture" in the wake of years of economic instability and violence. To keep the peace and restore prosperity, the authorities are now allowed to relocate children of dissidents, especially those of Asian origin, and libraries have been forced to remove books seen as unpatriotic--including the work of Bird's mother, Margaret, a Chinese American poet who left the family when he was nine years old. Bird has grown up disavowing his mother and her poems; he doesn't know her work or what happened to her, and he knows he shouldn't wonder. But when he receives a mysterious letter containing only a cryptic drawing, he is drawn into a quest to find her. His journey will take him back to the many folktales she poured into his head as a child, through the ranks of an underground network of librarians, into the lives of the children who have been taken, and finally to New York City, where a new act of defiance may be the beginning of much-needed change. Our Missing Hearts is an old story made new, of the ways supposedly civilized communities can ignore the most searing injustice. It's a story about the power--and limitations--of art to create change, the lessons and legacies we pass on to our children, and how any of us can survive a broken world with our hearts intact.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
ImperfectCJ
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

Reminiscent of Atwood, this novel is a chilling portrayal of the way that government can use (and does use) the threat of child removal to enforce compliance from subsets of a population. It's also a great reminder of what privilege looks like, especially in times of crisis. This novel helps me reframe my potential role under an autocratic government, given my race, gender, age, marital status, and economic situation. And it's also a great story.

ImperfectCJ No points off for this novel leading to the addition of two more books to my TBR. 3w
50 likes1 comment
blurb
ImperfectCJ
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image

I'm reading too much or too fast this past week and as a result, things are steeped in unreality and the emotional ambience of each novel is seeping into my daily life, which is unsettling, especially since I'm reading a lot of dystopian fiction and books in which people act poorly, repeatedly and after they really should know better.

So, time to touch base with the real world. Pelicans always remind me of little pteranodons.

thecheckoutstack I know exactly the feeling you‘re describing. That‘s why I can‘t watch horror movies 3w
46 likes1 comment
review
Laughterhp
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

This has been on my TBR for a while and finally picked it up. It‘s a very moving dystopian novel. Bird‘s mother leaves him when he‘s like 10 years old and he doesn‘t really understand why. The country is very anti-Asian because they believe it‘s China‘s fault the US economy and everything collapsed. He‘s now 12 and starting to question everything.

43 likes1 stack add
review
OriginalCyn620
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

Wow! This was powerful. If you like dystopian fiction and haven‘t read this, I recommend it!

#bookspinbingo - free space
#24in2024
#readaway2024

DieAReader 🥳🥳🥳 4mo
Jas16 Another one on my TBR. Glad it hear it was so good! 4mo
TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!! 4mo
38 likes1 stack add3 comments
review
OrangeMooseReads
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

Ng is a must read.
All of the current hot button issues balled into one story that is engaging and well written.
It started with economic collapse, then they needed someone to blame, and it escapes from there. The story centers on M and Noah/Bird, a mother and son. M is a little known poet until a young lady is killed at a protest holding a sign with a line from one of M‘s poems. It becomes a rallying cry. M must go into hiding.
4.8⭐️ READ IT!

31 likes1 stack add
blurb
Kshakal
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks I‘ve got to get to this one! 8mo
41 likes1 comment
review
AvidReader25
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

In the timeless tradition of The Handmaid's Tale Ng tackles a dystopian future that is woven tightly with reality. The USA has made it through a crisis, but the legislation that resulted has increased suspicion of Asian Americans. She focuses on the families whose children are taken from them in order to "protect" them from sedition indoctrination. I enjoyed Ng in the past but never before have I felt rocked by the quiet emotion this book held.

AvidReader25 The pup is fine, just recovering from being fixed and in need of lots of snuggles. 9mo
dabbe 🖤🐾🖤 9mo
kspenmoll That beautiful face! 9mo
See All 7 Comments
mcctrish Oh the cone ☹️ extra snuggles needed for sure 🐾🐾 ( I have this one on my TBR and I will read it this year ) 9mo
batsy Awww! That face ❤️ 9mo
AvidReader25 @mcctrish This book was so different from what I was expecting! I hope you enjoy it. 9mo
27 likes7 comments
blurb
monalyisha
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image

This month, I snuck in 3 #AuldLangSpine picks from @BarbaraJean : All Systems Red, Legends & Lattes, and Our Missing Hearts.

I think the most unexpected thing that focusing on her list did for me was to help me reincorporate speculative fic back into my reading life in a more conscious way! I‘ve been gravitating more towards memoirs, contemporary fiction, & literary fiction lately. 👇🏻

monalyisha I wasn‘t aware that I‘d been missing the particular brand of strangeness that comes with other worlds, other creatures, and a dash of magic. I‘m delighted (and strangely a little bit relieved) to find that fantasy‘s been waiting here for me all along. 11mo
monalyisha @BarbaraJean, I still have a few titles from your list checked out — particularly the Sarah Gailey & Kate DiCamillo! I‘m hoping to get to them this month. Thanks for a lovely reading experience! I hope we get to connect further in the year ahead. Happy 2024! 🥳 11mo
BarbaraJean Oh, I love that! Particularly because, in a nice counterpoint, your list nudged me in the opposite direction—towards some nonfiction I loved and wouldn‘t have otherwise picked up (and I‘m planning to work in several of your lit fic choices in the next couple of months). 💜 I hope you‘re able to get to the Gailey and the DiCamillo—those two were both 5-star reads for me! 11mo
61 likes3 comments
review
monalyisha
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

Long review ahead. Buckle in. 😉

“Later on, we‘ll conspire
As we dream by the fire.”

The piece of writing that transported me over the threshold and into readerly awe is when Sadie & Bird, the young adolescents at this novel‘s center, tend to a fire. They build it, gingerly, failing before they succeed, and take turns blowing on the kindling. 👇🏻

monalyisha 1/11: Meanwhile, they discuss the meaning of the word “conspire” - “to breathe together” - a definition Bird has learned from his father, a former Linguistics professor. It calls to mind the lyrics of Bing Crosby‘s cozy holiday tune, except instead of summoning feelings of warmth, the atmosphere as they speak is filled with fear…and a vulnerable fluttering of hope. Sadie notes that the word is “actually kind of beautiful.” 11mo
monalyisha 2/11: We need to conspire, in every sense of the word. That‘s what the pandemic (and its politics) made clear — how strong the need is and how scary that action is, too. We need to take a deep, collective breath…and then plan and dream of something new. Right now, the collective breath seems just as impossible as any other piece of it. 11mo
monalyisha 3/11: The only pause we‘ve had as a society was one in which we *couldn‘t* breathe. Can we please, somehow, transform our way of life into something that allows time for both at once? What would that be like? To have time to pause AND breathe? 11mo
See All 16 Comments
monalyisha 4/11: In her afterword, Ng says, “Bird and Margaret‘s world isn‘t exactly our world, but it isn‘t *not* ours, either.” She quotes Atwood, “If I was to create an imaginary garden, I wanted the toads in it to be real.” She includes racism, violence, surveillance, propaganda, censorship, and the forced removal of children. We‘re seeing all of that now. 11mo
monalyisha 5/11: So what do we do? Burn it all down. But if we do that, what happens after? As in the book, the real-life answer is: kickback happens. If you riot, if you rise up, it might lead to an alleviation of AND (unbelievably and simultaneously) a *worsening* of what prompted the riots in the first place. 11mo
monalyisha 6/11: I think we‘re all afraid. What if we try to start a fire and fail? What if the kickback is too extreme? And what if we can‘t find people with strong enough lungs to help start the fire in the first place? When you‘re stuck in conditions that seem impossible, Ng‘s words ring true: “It can‘t go on, everyone said, but it kept going on.” 11mo
monalyisha 7/11: And what if we succeed? What if we enact a prescribed or a controlled burning? Will we still be around to witness the regrowth? How difficult will life be in the barren landscape before that growth? Can we handle it? 11mo
monalyisha 8/11: I think Ng is honest in the way that she portrays the future for her characters — characters who do rise up. We don‘t know if they will survive and we don‘t know what their lives will be like, either. But…she does give her readers the sense that whatever hardships they‘ll face, it has to be better than a half-life spent keeping your head down. 11mo
monalyisha 9/11: Ng‘s message to her readers about art as protest is clear and strong. She writes about the unintended and intended consequences of art; its potential for multiple meanings (scary and exhilarating as that may be) and the way that art can respond to, impact, and create reality. 11mo
monalyisha 10/11: Ng left me feeling hungry for change…and a pomegranate. 11mo
ChaoticMissAdventures I really loved this one, I agree so much to think about and it is such a big look at humanity I think you have inspired me to reread this 11mo
Aimeesue Fantastic review. And Amen to every word of that. 11mo
Donna1980 I found this book really thought provoking. The links between her style of writing and Atwood‘s really did hit you between the eyes. Ng really is a wonderful author. 11mo
Flaneurette Such a great and thoughtful review! I guess I should read this 11mo
59 likes3 stack adds16 comments
quote
monalyisha
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image

“It can‘t go on, everyone said, but it kept going on.”

55 likes1 comment
review
Lizwarnerpdx
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
Pickpick

I hope our world & country never devolve into the reality described in this book. But if it does I hope for people like the main characters here.

review
Melismatic
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

Book 1 of 2024.

A solid pick despite a relative lack of plot or forward propulsion. The engine here is emotion and empathy in a “dystopia” that honestly feels a little too familiar. It‘s about the power of stories keeping our loved ones alive and close to us. It‘s about familial love (both genetic & chosen). ✨🐦📖💙

dabbe 🖤🐾🖤 11mo
31 likes1 comment
blurb
Melismatic
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image

And we‘re off in 2024 👀🥳💪🏻

TBR for January is the above (bc I will be gifting it for my book club meetup at the end of the month), #AuthorAMonth, hopefully two from my #AuldLangSpine stack and my actual local book club pick. Plus anything else that looks good.

💖✨ 🐦 🐈

Soubhiville I liked this one, hope you do too! 11mo
33 likes1 comment
blurb
monalyisha
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image

Love the mid-process full foils look. 👽✌🏻✨

Brought my next #AuldLaneSpine pick to the salon (but haven‘t started it yet). I might switch to Legends & Lattes. I‘m feeling very indecisive!

julesG How many stations can you tune into with all the foil? 11mo
monalyisha @julesG Oh, I‘m like Jodie Foster in Contact. 11mo
ChaoticMissAdventures I am feeling super indecisive too! Hope it isn't a sign of the year to come. 11mo
monalyisha @ChaoticMissAdventures I went with Legends & Lattes and it was the right choice! Hope you make some fortunate decisions, too. 💓 11mo
84 likes4 comments
review
Madison91
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Panpan

I kept giving up on this book and coming back to it between books. It was a really tough finish

review
Brooke_H
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

I found this novel unsettling--it takes place in a US that is just hair's-breadth adjacent to our own. This is a dictatorship where books are banned, people are punished for questioning authority, and PAOs ("people of Asian origin") are constantly targeted. Worst of all, children of marginalized people are taken suddenly from their parents at the slightest infraction or whiff of disloyalty. These children are the "missing hearts" of the title.

REPollock Such a thought-provoking and disturbing book. 13mo
29 likes1 comment
review
JillR
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

I do love some dystopian fiction, and this was v good. Sweet and lyrical; I really enjoyed the writing. The portrayal of a near future in the US feels timely and prescient, with a frightening risk of it being a reality. I loved the librarians quietly and steadfastly searching, and I fell for sweet Bird and his own search for his mother.

TrishB Great review 👍🏻 I loved this one too. 13mo
JillR @trishb it was a nice surprise too, as I think I was in the minority who didn‘t love Little Fires 13mo
42 likes2 comments
blurb
HeyT
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image

#BookReport
Stellar week of finishes for me! Absolutely devoured the latest Murderbot then finished the work book club pick and my commute read.

#WeeklyForecast
Goal this week is to catch up with ReadingWesteros and then go a little deeper in Hyperion.

review
HeyT
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

The only reason I picked this up is because I have to lead the book club discussion at work this month. I‘m glad I read it but the themes are too close to home in today‘s climate so I found it very sad.

GondorGirl This was such a good, unexpected book. 13mo
24 likes1 stack add1 comment
blurb
Brooke_H
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image

It‘s Feminist Book Club book mail day! 💖📚

blurb
HeyT
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image

Getting some reading done for work while waiting for the Queen concert to open up.

18 likes1 comment
review
Erin.Elizabeth10
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Mehso-so

I loved Little Fires Everywhere, so Our Missing Hearts was disappointing. It felt patchy with some parts so interesting and others so boring. I never connected to any of the characters—they always felt like descriptions at an arm‘s length. The dystopian elements and depictions of racism and injustice are important, but also felt like so many other things from 2020 & 2021. It didn‘t feel fresh. I did like the folklore storytelling. An uneven read.

blurb
DHill
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image

Another excellent novel by Celeste Ng. Heartbreaking and hopeful. Read so well by Lucy Liu.

45 likes1 stack add
review
REPollock
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

Fahrenheit 451-esque tale in a near-future dystopia that could easily be the way the world goes. A departure from Ng‘s previous novels set in the recent past and an exciting new narrative direction for a skilled writer I always savor reading.

review
Hannah_11
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

Incredible! This one sucked me in from the very beginning, Ng has this way of writing that makes you think and question everything know or thought you knew. I couldn‘t put it down #pick #ourmissinghearts #CelesteNg

blurb
wen4blu
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image

Up next. Just released in paperback, I decided to pull the hard copy from the bottom of my tbr pile.

Leftcoastzen Happens to me more often than I like to admit. Rush out & get hardcover , then not get to it till it comes in paperback 🙄 1y
34 likes2 stack adds1 comment
blurb
TheLudicReader
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image

#bookhaul number bazillion….but who‘s counting.

dabbe 🤩🤩🤩 1y
39 likes1 comment
review
Kshakal
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

I am not sure I have words to describe this book… at the start I thought I was going to hate it… I found it strange and not enjoyable… and then I kept reading… it slowly morphed into the most beautifully heartbreaking story that can and does happen in this world. Everyone should read this book!

blurb
Kshakal
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image

Easing into the day with a good book and kitty cuddles! 💗

AnnCrystal 😺🐈 blanket looks cozy cute 🥧. 1y
dabbe Kitties and blanket and colors: c'mon autumn! 🖤🍁🧡 1y
42 likes2 comments
review
CaitlinR
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

This beautifully written novel is a terrifying cautionary tale positing where we will find ourselves if we continue on the path to an autocracy. Following a period of financial and societal meltdown, the U.S. government names a common enemy: Asians, and passes draconian laws to control the lives of citizens. Worst is the “re-location” of dissenter‘s children. Poets and librarians are the heroes. In my mind, Bird and his mother will live forever.

CaitlinR Photo of Celeste Ng by Kieran Kesner. 1y
26 likes1 comment
review
Bookish_Gal
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

Difficult story on parenthood discrimination and relocating their children. This is an America that blames China for the crisis to the extreme. Bleeds to black families. Anyone can say something and your children are taken to a new family. Book is slow, so there are some lags, yet I kept loosing track of time. It‘s a mother-son questioning PACT: Preserving American Culture and Traditions. “We promise to protect American values”. Certain Americans

review
TamTracy
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Bailedbailed

I dnf at 70%. I was bored and couldn‘t stay focused on the story.

review
Eva_B
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

This is one that I am truly glad I persisted with! I really struggled with the start of it and it took me ages to warm to it. But I ended up loving it! Celeste Ng is a wonderful author. This book is a cross between Handmaid‘s Tale and 1984 and is very relevant to what is happening in the world today. Very cleverly written

13 likes1 stack add
review
Bevita
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

Wow. Unforgettable. I read these books snd they‘re sort of dystopian and then it‘s just like Fox News and the crazy nationalist xenophobia stuff. Her best book by far. Also a nice ode to poets!

blurb
Lexeegee
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng

I gave the audiobook another shot and I still couldn't finish it. Checked out the physical book from the library. I am determined to finish.

review
BarbaraJean
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

I‘ve seen a lot of negative reviews for this, and I‘ll grant that it doesn‘t have the same depth of insightful characterization as Ng‘s previous novels. But I really liked what she was doing here. It‘s not quite dystopian and its “Crisis” is not Covid, but the semi-post-apocalyptic vibe felt all too familiar in light of the past few years. It‘s quiet and understated in many ways, which makes the moments of vulnerability and violence more powerful.

blurb
Lexeegee
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng

I'm listening to this on audiobook read by Lucy Liu. And while the story is really intriguing, I am struggling to finish it. I'm not sure why but something about the cadence in her performance is a bit off putting. I have taken a break and will come back to it later.

review
AlizaApp
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

In a dystopian and racist surveillance state, a young boy runs away from home to find his mother, a poet and revolutionary. Beautiful writing, as always, but the future had never seemed quite so close as what‘s already happening.

21 likes1 stack add
review
amma-keep-reading
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
Mehso-so

It wasn't terrible but it didn't rock my world either.

review
Ibsbadibs
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
This post contains spoilers
show me
Pickpick

Unfortunately this felt like it could be very real, mostly because there are many instances of similar things happening throughout history. I liked the artistic protests, I liked the library usage, and I liked the mystery of how everything fit together. Not that I expected or needed a happy ending- but I do wonder what living would have looked like had she survived.

review
Twocougs
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

Had the audiobook for this incredible novel. So cannot say enough about this heartbreak of a story.

27 likes1 stack add
review
Donna1980
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

Started this today sitting out in the garden. 100 pages in and can‘t put it down. Have loved Celeste Ng‘s first 2 novels and this one may just become my favourite yet. Fans of the Handmaid‘s Tale will draw parallels here for sure.

2 likes1 stack add
review
LadyCait84
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

A heavy one, but maybe the best I‘ve read this year.

Its version of America is too close to reality to really be labeled dystopian, and that gives the novel as much punch as the story of its characters. On the page, and in the world, there are swarms of those who rationalize atrocities due to fear or ignore them due to the false comfort of “it‘s not my family,” rendering the novel a rebuke as well as a warning.

review
Tonton
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

Ng takes the zeitgeist now and gives it a little push to give us an authoritarian America that‘s a nightmare of fascist racism, control (through separating children from families, book banning) and fear. Bird‘s Chinese mother (a banned poet) went underground to protect the family. One day he finds a message and runs away to find her. Art and poetry as a means of political revolution; heartbreak and hope. Antifa librarians rule🌟❣️

sarahbarnes Great review! 2y
Suet624 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 2y
Tonton @sarahbarnes, @Suet624 Thanks❣️🌟😎 2y
See All 6 Comments
Lindy Yes, I felt the same about this story being scarily close to our current zeitgeist, and encouraged by the message of revolutionary possibilities of art. It led me to read 2y
Tonton @Lindy By Havel! Thank you, will read! 2y
Lindy @Tonton 👍 2y
29 likes6 comments
review
Pinta
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Mehso-so

Author‘s note: “There is a long history, in the US and elsewhere, of removing children as a means of political control.” Economic downturn leads to scapegoating China, violence against Asian Americans, the Preserving American Culture & Tradition Act. Books ripped from shelves, children ripped from parents, patriotic reeducation. Bird searches out his poet-activist mother. Powerful topic, but pacing feels off, flashback center section drags. 2022

review
TrishB
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

I really enjoyed this one. A tough subject, as racism, discrimination and authorities abusing their populace should be. Not subtle but the time for subtlety has probably passed if we‘re not going down this path.

Cathythoughts Great review, I‘m going to try this one today👍🏻♥️ 2y
TrishB @Cathythoughts hope you like it 🤞🏻 2y
75 likes2 stack adds2 comments
quote
TrishB
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image

🤬 this is how we lose democracy. Loving this book.

review
kissmehardy
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

On both a sentence and a story level, this was an incredible book. The way the Crisis led into PACT society felt chillingly possible, and I liked that the story was more about recognizing an unjust world than burning it all down. (Not that I didn't want it burned down, it's just a more typical plot arc!) Really makes you think. #dystopianfiction #literaryfiction

review
kbuggle
Our Missing Hearts | Celeste Ng
post image
Pickpick

I‘ll read anything Ng writes because she is a master of words.