Pao
Shortlisted for the Costa First Novel Award and the Commonwealth Book Prize, Pao is Kerry Young’s compelling debut novel.
Kingston, 1938. Fourteen-year-old Yang Pao steps off the ship from China with his mother and brother, after his father has died fighting for the revolution. They are to live with Zhang, the ‘godfather’ of Chinatown, who mesmerises Pao with stories of glorious Chinese socialism on one hand, and the reality of his protection business on the other.
When Pao takes over the family’s affairs he becomes a powerful man. He sets his sights on marrying well, but when Gloria Campbell comes to him for help he is drawn to her beauty and strength. They begin a relationship that continues even after Pao marries Fay Wong, the ‘acceptable’ but headstrong daughter of a wealthy Chinese merchant.
As the political violence escalates in the 1960s the lines between Pao’s socialist ideals and private ambitions become blurred. Jamaica is transforming, the tides of change are rising, and the one-time boss of Chinatown finds himself cast adrift.
Published: Bloomsbury 2011
Bloomsbury UK
Shortlisted for the Costa First Novel Award 2011
Commonwealth Book Prize 2012
East Midlands Book Award 2012
‘A pacy but absorbing saga of domestic struggle and gangland manoeuvring set against the violent backdrop of postwar Jamaican politics’ – Independent on Sunday
‘Young’s heartfelt, sparky and affecting debut novel is a chronicle of multicultural Jamaica … The complexity of Jamaican society in Pao is fascinating and bewildering’ – Guardian
‘A pacy but absorbing saga of domestic struggle and gangland manoeuvring set against the violent backdrop of postwar Jamaican politics’ – Independent on Sunday
‘Young’s heartfelt, sparky and affecting debut novel is a chronicle of multicultural Jamaica … The complexity of Jamaican society in Pao is fascinating and bewildering’ – Guardian