Last Night at the Telegraph Club the 2021 National Book Award for Young People's Literature written by Malinda Lo is a story that has yet to be told in the arena of young adult literature. Lo deserves the award for her portrayal of Lily Hu, a 17 year-old Chinese-American daughter of immigrants who settled in Chinatown in San Francisco. The year is 1954 and the Red Scare is is buzzing all around Lily and her community. She must be careful with whom she associates or else it could spell trouble for her family. What ends up happening not only affects Lily's future, but also those around her.
With the tone of a coming of age story, Lo reminds the reader of what it's like to be a teenager trying to figure out who you really are. When Lily sees an advertisement for The Telegraph Club with a male impersonator or cross-dresser, something in her is awakened. She feels drawn to the club and finds a fellow classmate, Kath, who has an in there. Once Kath introduces Lily to the club and the people inside, a whole new world opens up for Lily. A world where others who feel like her can feel normal. How can Lily return to the person her family expects her to be after she's discovered her feelings for women?
The best part of this story is when Lo uses the flashbacks between Lily's storyline with ones about her parents and her aunt. Their own circumstances and journeys to the U.S. to where they are in the 1950s sheds much light on their actions. As I read the story I kept telling myself if Lily only knew her own family's struggles with their identity in the U.S., then she could open up to them about her own apprehension about where she stands.
As a former history teacher, I also enjoyed the timelines that Lo includes that show the year, Lily and her family's major moments, and parts of world and American history that have affected Chinese Americans since they were first brought to the U.S. to build the trans-continental railroad. As the daughter of an aerospace engineer, I enjoyed the development of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory as Lily's other passion is studying space travel. Thankfully her aunt is a human computer for the program and encourages Lily to pursue her interest in math, science, and engineering. This part of history is interesting for readers to compare to Katherine Johnson and her pioneering work she did for NASA.
This story is an important one for people to read who may not be familiar with the experiences of Chinese Americans. It's also a history of how the LGBTQ+ community has had to seek out safe spaces to be themselves. It surprised me that in the ever-inclusive city of San Francisco, there was once a time that it was illegal for homosexuals to even congregate in public. The end of the novel is full of more information that Lo explains served as her basis for all of the storylines in the book. Readers who are interested have a number of resources to use to continue learning about more people who lived during this time and left their mark on the country.
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