
Book #158 of 2019:
The Boat People by Sharon Bala
I appreciate that this novel speaks to the modern refugee experience, but there’s not a whole lot elevating its story beyond that inherently emotional subject matter. Based on a real incident from 2010 when five hundred Sri Lankans arrived on a cargo ship to seek asylum in Canada, the narrative splits its time among three fictional protagonists: one of the migrants, a young legal intern assigned to his case due to her shared ethnic background, and the government adjudicator who must balance the xenophobia of her superiors with her own family history in a Japanese internment camp. (The latter character represents the biggest weakness for me; I rarely found her petty career and home life concerns to be especially sympathetic.)
There are some books that fail in a certain grand ambition, and there are others like this one that just don’t seem to set their sights high enough in the first place. I don’t regret reading it, but I doubt it will stick with me for long.
[Content warning for suicide and discussion of rape.]
★★★☆☆








