Reviews

Flyktingar by Viet Thanh Nguyen

obsidian_blue's review against another edition

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5.0

Wow this collection made me think and get even more fascinated about those who left Vietnam and came to the United States to resettle. Some stories didn't resonate with me as much as others did. The stories flowed together well though I thought.

"Black-Eyed Women" (5 stars)- a woman with a career as a ghostwriter finds herself laying some ghosts to rest. Her heartbreaking story of her and her family fleeing for a better life in America will gut you when you get to the end and read about how entwined she is with her mother.

"The Other Man" (5 stars)- a man who resettles in the US in the 1970s finds himself on uncharted territory when he ends up being sponsored by two gay men in San Francisco.

"War Years" (5 stars)- a young boy recounts a story about a widowed woman from Vietnam demanding money from his family in order to fight the Communists. The story helps him see his mother and father in a new light. I honestly thought the story was going in a different direction until I got to the end and you end up feeling pity.

"The Transplant" (4 stars)- A man named Arthur Arellano who has a liver transplant. This causes him to look for the man's family. This causes him to look at his family in a different way when he finally meets the son of his transplant donor. I was enjoying this until the end, when I think that Nguyen maybe wanted you to feel sorry for poor put upon Arthur. I was kind of over this guy though when you realize how self absorbed he is.

"I'd Love You to Want Me" (5 stars)- A woman who is struggling with her husband's onset of Alzheimer's. Mrs. Khanh's story was probably my next favorite after Black-Eyed Women. Her realizing that her husband had a life she didn't know and how she really doesn't care for her oldest son. You get to see Mrs. Khanh slowly giving up on her dreams when she starts to think about what does love really mean. In her mind, it's being devoted.

"The Americans" (5 stars)- James Carver, an African American former Air Force pilot (I think) goes back to Vietnam with his Japanese wife to visit their daughter who is there teaching. Lord, his daughter was exhausting. There's a scene when she yells at her father for what he did while running missions in the country. And sigh, nope, no sympathy for Claire. I did love though James going through his struggles in his career and life and him being pretty baffled by his daughter and what she wants from him. Loved the ending a lot though.

"Someone Else Besides You" (3 stars)- My least favorite. A man going through his family's history and why he wasn't ready to have children with his ex wife. The father in this story was odd to me. I don't know what his purpose was besides to criticize the son. The story takes an odd turn after some vandalism.

"Fatherland" (5 stars)-Really enjoyed this one. A woman named Phuong is excited to meet her half sister who has lived in America, that comes back to Vietnam to visit her, and the rest of the family. The story set up (Phuong's sister Vivien) was raised with her two other siblings in America and her mother divorced their father. The father marries his mistress and has three other children he names after the first set (yeah that happened). What I loved was Phuong coming to realization about her father and her half sister.

kailachaz's review against another edition

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2.0

DNF - Although this book is short, I couldn't push through. I usually enjoy reading immigrant / refugee stories and this book just did not do it for me. Maybe I'll attempt to reread it in a few weeks. I also didn't realize when I purchased the book, that the stories would all primarily be centered around refugees from different countries w/in Asia. Granted the author is Vietnamese, but all reviews dub it as a compilation of refugee stories - not refugee stories from a specific geographic migration area.

irritated_iris's review against another edition

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challenging emotional hopeful informative reflective tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.25

ct21's review against another edition

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4.0

Very moving, a real treat. definitely read the bonus articles included at the end!

noonebutchels's review against another edition

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4.0

(4.5)

I bought this to read because I loved The Sympathizer, and not reading the book's back before I began, I didn't even realize it was short stories.

While reading and enjoying myself, I reflected on what a brilliant gift it is to find an author whose work you love, and to watch that love expand as you read their work in different contexts and learn that you'd follow them anywhere.

Long and short fiction, and essays as well - I will officially read anything that Viet Thanh Nguyen publishes.

tspelczechquer's review against another edition

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4.0

Excellent collection of short stories by Pulitzer Prize author of The Sympathizer. Reminiscent of Jhumpa Lahiri's Interpreter of Maladies, these eight stories feature characters caught between worlds and how they struggle with their identities.

carlabarros's review against another edition

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inspiring reflective sad medium-paced

3.0

idoreadbooks's review against another edition

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2.0

Unfortunately, this wasn't really my kind of book..

bagusayp's review against another edition

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5.0

This book contains 8 short stories, among those is one which is an autobiographical one. The book is such page turners that I enjoy reading it even though I’m not a refugee and had little contact with people who have been refugees. The stories explore many different things, varied from gay lives, the hardship of life for Vietnamese refugees in the US after the war ended, and also life in modern Vietnam for refugees who came back to Vietnam only recently. A great book indeed to spend time on weekends.

jsoakes's review against another edition

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4.0

There is a lot going on here and think I would have to review each story individually to give a fair assessment, but I think they were all worth reading. These each evoked specific emotions and it is a bit of a roller coaster to listen to these back to back as the tone changes quite a bit between stories. The refugee perspective is always interesting. These stories focus on finding a place in the world once the world you knew is gone and the perspective of children of refugees.