Last Night at the Telegraph Club

English language

Published June 27, 2021 by Penguin Young Readers Group.

ISBN:
978-0-525-55527-8
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"Do you hear me? Everyone knows you're a good Chinese girl. This is just a mistake." For Lily Hu, "good Chinese girl" feels like a mask she's only recently discovered she's been wearing. Or worse, like a trap--one that finally sprung the night she walked through the door into the Telegraph Club with Kathleen Miller. She's known Kath since they were first in math together in junior high. Now they're the last two senior girls in advanced math, and Lily can't deny that what she feels with Kath is about much more than calculus. For most people, the Telegraph Club is only another dingy lesbian nightclub just beyond the border of Chinatown, but for Lily and Kath it might as well be another planet. Balancing her family's need to present an ideal American facade with her unmistakeable desire for Kath would never be easy, but with deportation suddenly looming over …

4 editions

Best book I've read this year

This is the story of 17-year old Lily Hu in 1950s San Francisco Chinatown and her slow and risky introduction into lesbianism. It's all embedded within real historical events, with so many references to things and places and events and people that actually existed (the Author's Note explains a lot of them - well-researched! and if you want to read up on them, there's even a bibliography list). I devoured this book with lots of joy. It's interesting and thrilling and capturing. Go read it!

This is pretty cool

No rating

It is a story where bad things happen to the queers, but it's not a tragic story. Things go on, people can leave, and find each other again.

I'm often easily bored by historical fiction (idk why!) but this worked very well for me.

Review of 'Last Night at the Telegraph Club' on 'Storygraph'

2nd gen Chinese girl discovers cute girls and drag kings. 1950s America has opinions on this development. 

“She couldn’t put into words why she had gathered these photos together, but she could feel it in her bones: a hot and restless urge to look–and, by looking, to know.” 

Review of 'Last Night at the Telegraph Club' on 'Goodreads'

It’s 1954 and the Red Scare is in full force. Chinese Americans such as Lily’s family must keep a low profile or risk being accused of Communism and deported. When Lily finds an advert for a male impersonator performing in San Francisco, she is drawn to her in a way she doesn’t understand. At school her best friend frowns upon her growing friendship with Kathleen, who leads Lily through the doors of the Telegraph Club, to a forbidden world where Lily can be free to be herself.

Even in San Francisco, the fifties were not a good time to be gay, with homosexuality still outlawed and venues like the Telegraph Club were frequently shut down due to obscenity laws, accusing them of leading young women into acts of depravity. In contrast, Lily and Kathleen’s story is so sweet and your heart will break at how hard it is for them …

Review of 'Last Night at the Telegraph Club' on 'Goodreads'

An American-born Chinese teen coming to terms with her homosexuality and young love in 1950s’ San Francisco Chinatown.

This is one of the books I had pre-ordered in 2020 that inspired me to start this queer fiction trip and the setting and summary sparked intrigue the moment I heard about it. Lo has made a 15-minute introduction video to this, her 6th novel, as well as a Spotify playlist of music “in and inspired by” the book. She’s also blogging “Notes from the Telegraph Club”, a really interesting series diving into the research she put in for the novel. Also, We Need Diverse Books also has a great Q&A with Lo about the book and its origins.

It’s a lovely story — with an appendix of historical context and references for further reading, which was a really interesting thought that I don’think I’ve seen before in YA …

Review of 'Last Night at the Telegraph Club' on 'Storygraph'

No rating

I've previously loved some of this author's other books but just didn't get pulled into this one. It starts out with a lot of the tension centering around interpersonal dynamics of Lily's friend group, and I got as far as the beginning of the deportation plotline, but it's about 50/50 whether I'll like a non-thriller YA book with no magic, and this falls in the "no" pile for me. If you like sapphic historical YA about older teens finding love, give this a try.

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