Tracey Lien investigates the Vietnamese Cabramatta of the 1990s
- Written by Anh Nguyen Austen, Researcher, Australian Catholic University
Bruce Lee famously gave the advice, “research your own experience”. In her debut novel, All That’s Left Unsaid[1], Tracey Lien researches her experience to convey the emotional complexity of Vietnamese refugee and immigrant experiences in Australia.
Lien was born and raised in South Western Sydney, and grew up in 1990s Cabramatta[2], where her enthralling murder mystery is set. She earned her Masters of Fine Arts at the University of Kansas and worked as a reporter for the Los Angeles Times.
Review: All That’s Left Unsaid – Tracey Lien (HQ Fiction)
A ‘model minority’ and drug crimes
In the opening pages of the novel, narrator Ky Tran returns from Melbourne (where she’s a cadet journalist) to Cabramatta for the funeral of her beloved brother, Denny Tran. Wearing his “Most Likely to Succeed” sash, Denny is stomped to death in a restaurant, Lucky 8, while celebrating his high school graduation. Everyone in the restaurant that night surely must have witnessed the murder in some way. But they all tell the police they were in the kitchen or bathroom at the time – and saw nothing.