Stay True by Hua Hsu

Page 9

You couldn’t discriminate against the right answer. But I preferred to spend my time interpreting things.

Page 11

We spent summers and winters in Hsinchu; weeks would pass when the only people I spoke to were my parents and their middle-aged friends.

Page 21

The first generation thinks about survival; the ones that follow tell the stories.

Page 40

When you’re young, you are certain of your capacity to imagine a way out of the previous generation’s problems. There is a different way to grow old, paths that don’t involve conforming and selling out. We would figure it out together, and we would be different together. I just had to find people to be different with.

Page 57

The present was a drag. We lived for the future. Youth is a pursuit of this kind of small immortality. You want to leave something behind.

Page 64

It was only in my zine that I admitted to dreaming of anything great. In real life, I feared stepping into too large a world and failing. But I wrote things that were earnest and open, that I would never dare say out loud.

Page 68

You make a world out of the things you buy. Everything you pick up is a potential gateway, a tiny, cosmetic change that might blossom into an entirely new you.

Page 101

Everybody likes something — a song, a movie, a TV show — so you choose not to; this is how you carve out space for yourself.

Page 180

Sifting through these small moments of the past was a way of resisting the future.

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