THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 2021 • THE BULLETIN GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 7 LOCAL LITERARY HIGHLIGHTS bendbulletin.com/goread Authors Lalami, Yang to appear in weekend Novel Idea events BY DAVID JASPER • The Bulletin T he 2021 A Novel Idea … Read Together, concludes this weekend with virtual appearances by this year’s authors, Laila Lalami and Kelly Yang. Their books are timely choices for Deschutes Public Library system’s annual community reading celebration. Though landing in different genres and targeted at different audiences, “The Other Americans,” Lalami’s gripping social novel set in motion by a mysterious death, and “Front Desk,” Yang’s tween novel about a young girl who works at a motel, have at least one major thing in common: the experiences of immigrants in contemporary America. ‘THE OTHER AMERICANS’ In “The Other Americans,” the main character Nora, an emerging but strug- gling music composer, receives word that her Moroccan immigrant father has been killed by a hit-and-run driver. She rushes to her hometown in the Mo- jave Desert — evocatively written and practically a character in itself — to help her mother and figure out the fate of the family restaurant — reconnecting somewhat with her adolescence, and her former high school bandmate Jer- emy, whose become a cop after a stint in Iraq. The book is what’s called polyphonic, the story unfolding from multiple points of view, not just main character Nora: her mother Maryam, sister Salma, Jeremy, accident witness Efrain, a Mex- ican immigrant who fears coming for- ward, and even the possible culprits be- hind the death of her father, Driss. As NPR’s 2019 review of the book noted, Lalami, who holds a doctorate in linguistics, is “superb at creating differ- ent cadences on the page.” Continued on next page