Title: Terroryaki! Author: Jennifer K. Chung Year: 2011 Publisher: Arsenal Pulp Press Reviewer: Jake Beal This book is a particular treat for me to review, because the author is a friend of mine from back in my undergrad days---and, in fact, a former MITSFS keyholder as well. When she told me about the book she was writing, it sounded interesting, so I ordered a copy: support your local artist! So mostly I was hoping it just wouldn't be bad, fearing that I might find myself awkwardly not wanting to mention it in future conversations. And then I opened it up, and it blew me away. "Terroryaki" is a fun short novel that quickly and lightly dances through a tale of cross-cultural relationships and the asian-american experience, salted heavily with ghosts, pirates, cursed teriyaki, and nerd snark. Only a few pages in, I was actually laughing out loud, as the narrator describes her sister as a person who "fails the Bechdel test"---a sexism test for movies which asks whether there is ever a conversation between two female characters that is not about relationships. Ms. Chung deftly paints her characters with a mix of humor and tenderness, so that I found myself sympathizing with the sister even as she flounced through her drama-queen moves, and with the mother's distance and loss even as she nonsensically berates her children. And, of course, with the cursed ghost pirate chef. This is the sort of book where you can basically see where the plot is going, but never care because the point is how it will get you there and what interesting things will be seen to the side along the way. Like how, in between chapters, there are blog posts by the narrator, reviewing the best and worst imaginary teriyaki joints in the Seattle area, each one a little pearl of authorial invention. I savored the book across three days, though it's short enough to be read in a single solid evening. A fine first novel, and I hope that Ms. Chung will continue to write.