Reviews

The Displaced: Refugee Writers on Refugee Lives by Viet Thanh Nguyen

charadreemurr18a39's review against another edition

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challenging emotional informative

4.0

bysoleilceline's review against another edition

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5.0

Phenomenal collection, a must read for anyone. If you’re unfamiliar with the many refugee crises going on in the world and don’t know what it’s like being a migrant, refugee, or asylum seeker, uprooted and forging on for survivable in an unknown land, read this collection.

hilaryrowell's review against another edition

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challenging emotional hopeful informative inspiring reflective sad slow-paced

5.0

rjproffer's review against another edition

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5.0

A collection of messages of pain and intolerance in connection to their country of origin stands in my mind against the hatred that has simmered and erupted in these days of Brexit and Trump.

mrspenningalovesbooks's review against another edition

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4.0

I really enjoyed this memoir. The collection of refugee experiences was both eye-opening and humbling. To see so many of the phrases people use about refugees and their experiences as they come to a new country was devastatingly brutal and beautiful.

“Yet what all displaced people have most in common, regardless of where we come from, regardless if we are “official” refugees or “illegal@ immigrants, is our trauma. The trauma that propels us to this land, and the traumatic experiences that await us.”

“I believe that for the rest of your life, you carry that border inside of you. It becomes part of your psyche, your being, your identity.”

incredibella's review against another edition

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5.0

content/trigger warnings: death, murder, imprisonment, family separation, suicidal ideation, suicide attempts, rape, sexual assault, physical violence, bullying, racism, sexual harassment, xenophobia, islamophobia, antisemitism, police brutality, war, self-immolation mention, cancer mention, surgery mention, homophobia, internalized homophobia, torture

this collection of essays is extremely powerful and emotional. i would highly recommend it to anyone interested in hearing or learning more about the experiences of refugees. while it was difficult to get through at times, it's an incredibly important read.

a_tiny_bit_of_magic's review against another edition

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fast-paced

4.5

simlish's review against another edition

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5.0

The Displaced is absolutely one of the best things I've read all year. Most anthologies have stronger and weaker parts, but while I could pick out the absolute strongest essays in The Displaced, there's no way I could pick out a weakest one -- the quality is uniformly very high. It was absolutely much heavier reading than I was really capable of between obsessively checking the news, this election week, but it wasn't as hard to track as some heavy things are -- most of the essays are pretty short, so it was easy to get all the way through each one before my attention span crashed. 

The contributors cover a wide swathe of experiences, both geographically and over time. My only complaint is that all of the writers were children when they became refugees -- there's one essay where the story of a man who became a refugee as an adult is told secondhand, as he was interviewed by the writer. It seemed like a strange oversight, and I know it's not for lack of adult refugees, so I wonder what went into that decision making. Since all of the writers were children when they fled, they were not involved in the decision making of fleeing, which feels like an important perspective. It shifts the focus pretty forcefully onto the assimilation/homemaking of being a refugee, which might have been the point, but I don't know, it just felt like a pretty glaring absence to me.

The main themes were the concept of home and how it's affected by statelessness, the way being a refugee lingers far past gaining a new permanent home, and what residents of host/destination countries project onto refugees. The concept of ghosts showed up repeatedly -- refugees as ghosts, homeland as a ghost, the past as a ghost. Ghosts showed up almost as often as the journey itself. While the exacts of each journey were obviously different, the emotional through lines were the same from essay to essay, person to person. 

One thing I quite liked is that the forward starts with a request that reading this book not be all you, the reader, do to engage with refugee issues. 

melannrosenthal's review against another edition

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challenging emotional reflective fast-paced

5.0

giovannigf's review against another edition

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challenging emotional informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

5.0