Counterfeit

by Kirstin Chen

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Ava Wong has always played it safe. As a strait-laced, rule-abiding Chinese American lawyer with a successful surgeon as a husband, a young son, and a beautiful home, she's built the perfect life. But beneath this facade, Ava's world is crumbling: her marriage is falling apart, her expensive law degree hasn't been used in years, and her toddler's tantrums are pushing her to the breaking point. Enter Winnie Fang, Ava's enigmatic college roommate from Mainland China, who abruptly dropped out show more under mysterious circumstances. Now, twenty years later, Winnie is looking to reconnect with her old friend. But the shy, awkward girl Ava once knew has been replaced with a confident woman of the world, dripping in luxury goods, including a coveted Birkin in classic orange. The secret to her success? Winnie has developed an ingenious counterfeit scheme that involves importing near-exact replicas of luxury handbags and now she needs someone with a U.S. passport to help manage her business, someone who'd never be suspected of wrongdoing, someone like Ava. But when their spectacular success is threatened and Winnie vanishes once again, Ava is left to face the consequences....Peering behind the curtain of the upscale designer storefronts and the Chinese factories where luxury goods are produced, Kirstin Chen interrogates the myth of the model minority through two unforgettable women determined to demand more from life."-- show less

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lottpoet For a hell of a plot twist, and for two women standing together against the world.

Member Reviews

40 reviews
A novel with a clever twist, Counterfeit by Kirsten Chen is an entertaining read.

“Now, looking back, I see all the things I got wrong, all my preconceived notions and mistaken assumptions…. But I’ve gotten carried away. Enough about me. We’re here to talk about Winnie.”

Written in an almost, but not quite, stream-of-consciousness style, Part I unfolds from the perspective of Ava Wong. In her version of events, related anxiously to a police detective, Ava claims to be a victim of her former college roommate Winnie Fang. While Ava, with her Ivy League education, a handsome successful husband and a young son, may seem to have had it all, she confesses, her life was a bit of a mess. She was therefore vulnerable when Winnie, once a show more ‘fobby’ (denouncing her as fresh off the boat) now beautiful, confident and wealthy, blackmailed Ava into becoming involved in the business of importing and selling counterfeit luxury goods.

It is a convincing tale of woe that provokes some sympathy for Ava, especially as it seems Winnie has disappeared and left her holding the bag, so to speak, and is the perfect set up from Chen for the revelations in Part II.

“I guess what I’m saying, Detective, is that Winnie convinced me that ours was a benign and victimless crime.”

I quite enjoyed learning about the counterfeit trade, though it only reinforces my opinion that the value assigned to designer gear is a spectacular rort. I agree in part that counterfeiting is a victimless crime, at least where it concerns the buyers, whose only injury is to their ego, not so much for the sweatshop workers though. The scheme the women run seems surprisingly simple if you are bold enough, and though not without its risks, it seems the financial rewards are high.

“Everyone has a price. The trick is figuring out what it is without overpaying.”

I thought the way the story turned on itself, more than once, was really quite clever. Chen occasionally leans into the western stereotypes surrounding Asians, but deliberately so I think, making a point about expectations and how Ava and Winnie used them to their advantage.

Though its subject is con artists and crime, Counterfeit is an easy, fun, stylish read.
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½
Digital audiobook performed by Catherine Ho.

Most people would consider Ava Wong a successful woman. A Chinese-American with a law degree from Stanford, a husband who is a brilliant surgeon, and an adorable toddler son, she is, apparently, living the good life. But Ava hasn’t used her expensive law degree in years, and she’s at her wit’s end trying to deal with her son’s increasingly frequent tantrums. Then she runs into her old college roommate, Winnie Fang. Winnie is from mainland China and hoping to finally get her green card. And that is why she needs Ava’s help. All Ava has to do is go to China (with her genuine USA passport) and buy some designer handbags for Winnie’s business. What could possibly go wrong?

This is an show more engaging, entertaining, twisty heist involving counterfeit designer goods, a scheme to trick high-end department stores out of money, and an ever-increasing number of lies told to everyone about what is really going on.

Winnie is a master manipulator. Clearly a sociopath with no moral compass other than what is good for Winnie. Ava is torn between her loyalty to her husband and son, the pressure of hiding her illegal activities, and her desire to feel as good as Winnie’s schemes make her feel. As their enterprise gets into trouble Winnie vanishes, leaving Ava to face the authorities on her own. Will she crack? Can she, alone, pull off one more scam? Should she betray Winnie to save her own skin?

Chen goes back and forth in time to tell this story, occasionally interrupting the chronological flow to give the reader a snippet of Ava’s interview with a detective. This device is handled brilliantly by Chen. Keeping the reader off balance and guessing about what will finally happen.

Catherine Ho does a marvelous job of narrating the audiobook. She sets a good pace and I had little difficulty keeping the two women at the core of the story straight.
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Read for my RL book group. Counterfeit luxury handbags, "model minorities," an unreliable narrator, and a failing marriage... This was fine as a summer beach read, but after finishing it, I was wondering what on earth our group would talk about for a couple of hours. I needn't have worried - 14 people will have 14 different opinions and points to raise :) This was not a favorite of the group (one member keeps track of our ratings for each book we read) but after our discussion, I recognized that there was a little more to it than I had initially given it credit for.

3.5 stars
½
I was predisposed to like this. I spent years as a lawyer focused on brands. In addition to negotiating manufacturing contracts in China I did anticounterfeiting work. I spent a LOT of time in Shenzhen. And also I am a person who stopped practicing law not long after becoming a mom and who had to acknowledge that I did not want to be a lawyer for reasons having nothing to do with being a parent. It has been a lot of years since that was my life but there still there should have been a lot to relate to here in this story of a lawyer who "took a break" from practicing law to parent and had to come to grips with the fact that she was dreading returning to practice -- and who ended up becoming part of a luxury counterfeiting ring operating show more between the US and China.

And yet...I did not like this. To start, I did not think the writing was particularly good. The bigger issue though was that I don't think Chen knew what she wanted to say. It is hard in one story to take on the patriarchy, American exceptionalism, inauthentic authenticity (see e.g. most everything on Social and of course the bags), tech bro "ethics", consumer culture, the way in which we in the West make villains of the Chinese businesses that thrive by ignoring intellectual property rights when in fact most counterfeits were historically made at the behest of Westerners for purchase by Westerners. (Though at this point Chinese businesses and purchasers have beaten us at our own game.) And then that gets blended with the 30-something lament of women who did all the right things, went to the right schools, got the jobs our parents wanted us to get, married the right person, had the healthy though imperfect children, and then found ourselves trapped in a world we hate because we met everyone else's expectations and never created expectations or goals of our own. Chen tries to pack all this in, but the whole things collapses under the weight of her vision and her indecision and her mediocre prose.

Postscript: By coincidence I was reading this side-by-side with Nightbitch (so far it is much better though still flawed) which are both books which start with well-educated women who leave the workforce to parent and become less than desirable beings as the struggle with the dissonance of having a developed brain and then being expected to easily adapt to the brainless work of early stage child-rearing (they try to make it an intellectual pursuit, but its not.) This is a subject near and dear to my heart, and I think there is more to be written here, but I have to say that both of these books are insanely whiny and privileged. I don't usually call books out for that, I am whiny and privileged so that would be unbecoming, but even to my eyes this was off-putting.
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I received a copy of this book for free from the publisher (William Morrow) for promotional purposes.

This was such a fun and clever story!

First off, I have always loved luxury goods, especially handbags so the premise of this book was right up my alley.

Plot-wise, the twist halfway through was so smart and I did not see it coming. As soon as I got to the twist, I thought to myself, “This book is brilliant.” I won’t say much about the twist but I will say that it kept the book interesting.

I enjoyed the author’s writing style. It’s very effortless and flows well. It made the book an easy and smooth read.

The book also had some relatable quotes about being Asian American. For example at one point Ava reflects, “Asian show more families are different from white families. We don’t talk the way you all do. I mean, we talk, of course we talk, but not about our fears, our pain, our deepest, darkest secrets” (pg. 211). As an Asian American I find this quote to be so true. My (Asian) family talks, but it’s definitely not anything deep or soul searching. There is a lot of repression happening.

I found that this book would make a great movie. I hope it gets adapted one day because the luxury handbag aspect would make for a very stylish film.

Overall, I recommend this book to readers who love designer bags. Also, it gave me some Crazy Rich Asians vibes, so if you like that book, you’ll probably like this one.
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I don’t usually choose my books by recommendations from celebrities or book clubs (or both), but I’ve noticed that I enjoy quite a few of Reese Witherspoon’s recommendations. (I’ve also noticed that I tend to independently pick up good to read that Roxane Gay has reviewed – who knows, we could all be best book buds!) Anyway, what initially attracted me to Counterfeit was the cover – very striking, although is that just one big long earring in the woman’s ear or an Apple bag tag? All of this aside, Counterfeit is a unique read – think high end crime meets Sex and the City meets Crazy Rich Asians.

The story is told in the first person by Ava, about she met an old college friend who just happened to be running a business show more where high-end luxury handbags are bought, then returned using ‘superfakes’ – top quality fakes of the rarest, most sought-after designs and colours. The originals are then sold on. It’s a well-run scam and Winnie needs help. Ava is reluctant at first, but she’s bored of being a stay-at-home mum and has no desire to return to work. Her son is keen on throwing tantrums and not talking and her husband throws his life into his work. Isolated, what else can Ava do? Her one attempt at independence leaves her embarrassed and broke in Hong Kong, so she is practically forced to join Winnie. But both are good at what they do, no matter their motivation (Ava – get her son into a good preschool; Winnie – get her boss and former lover a liver transplant via Ava’s husband). The business readily expands. But then there’s a twist in the narrative. It turns out that Ava’s been telling all this to a detective and now it’s time to hear from Winnie. Who (if anyone) is innocent? Who is telling the truth?

The twist halfway through Counterfeit is undoubtedly its biggest strength, forcing the reader to reconsider everything they just read about Ava’s side of the story. Is she who she says she is? Reading about Ava’s recollection of events of a trip to China versus what Winnie recalls she was told is possibly the strongest part of the novel to sow the seeds of doubt. But overall, the crime is on the ‘lite’ side. If you enjoy reading descriptions of luxury handbags and the rarer, more expensive finishes, you will delight in reading some parts of the text. (But a LV defect? Never! But what a crucial part of the plot…) Other parts like using Asian women to be the ‘invisible’ couriers of returned goods sat awkwardly with me by the use of stereotypes. I also wonder at the looseness of the American returns system – it seems like you could return anything for any reason without any scrutiny – and how much of a role it could play in a scam like this.

I found Counterfeit to be light and fun overall despite the above points. The last part dragged out a little with a super speedy epilogue, but this would be a good holiday or midweek read.

http://samstillreading.wordpress.com
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3.5 stars.

Why do books without quotation marks bother me so much? I guess it feels like the people aren't having a conversation with each other or me.

Imagine after 20 years of not seeing your college roomie who you weren't even close with and who left early on in freshman year, and have had no contact with, finds you after 20 years. Ava knows it that this is strange. But things happen and Ava decides to help Winnie – bad move I know. Ava isn't a dummy by any means but she does it out of revenge and happens to be in Hong Kong and decides to “help” her. She tries to get out this scheme and tells Winnie as much, but gets deeper involved. Winnie is such a manipulator that Ava can't get out of it. The book is past and present at the show more same time where she is explaining to a detective how it was with Winnie.

The epilogue was a disappointment for me.

A fast paced book that I finished in two days.
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Author Information

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3 Works 1,045 Members

Awards and Honors

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Counterfeit
Original publication date
2022-06-07
People/Characters
Ava Wong; Winnie Fang
Dedication
For my grandmother
First words
The first thing I noticed was the eyes.
Blurbers
Lee, Janice Y. K.; Messud, Claire; Kaur Jaswal, Balli; Khong, Rachel
Original language
English

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Mystery
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PS3603 .H4495 .C68Language and LiteratureAmerican literature
BISAC

Statistics

Members
745
Popularity
37,831
Reviews
33
Rating
½ (3.53)
Languages
Dutch, English, Norwegian, Portuguese
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
18
ASINs
7