The Asian Age

Refugees is timely, timeless in telling human stories review By Viet Thanh Nguyen Grove Press, pp. 224, `864

- Rasha Madkour

Viet Thanh Nguyen’s new book, The Refugees, is both timely, given the current debate about refugees in America, and timeless in its exploratio­n of universal human struggles.

This gorgeous collection of short stories recalls Jhumpa Lahiri’s Interprete­r of Maladies, but with Vietnam as the loose centre around which the richly drawn characters orbit. There’s Liem, a newly arrived refugee whose “habit of forgetting was too deeply ingrained, as if he passed his life perpetuall­y walking backward through a desert, sweeping away his footprints”. There are longtime residents Mr and Mrs Khahn, distant from their American-raised children, as well as those who stayed behind, like Phuong, wistful for a different future. And there’s Claire, an American transplant with no familial ties to the southeast Asian nation who explains to her incredulou­s father that she has a “Vietnamese soul”.

Nguyen convincing­ly takes on the voices and lives of these myriad characters, whose stories highlight not only the unique horrors that drive people to become refugees, but also the universal experience­s that affirm their humanity — from the transforma­tion of a 13-year-old “brave enough to say what I had suspected for a while, that my mother wasn’t always right” to the heartbreak and turmoil of a woman losing her husband to the fog of dementia.

Nguyen won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction for his 2015 novel The Sympathize­r. The writing in The Refugees is resonant and evocative, abounding with delightful descriptio­ns: “tears of rust streaking the walls,” “a countertop with black veins in the grouting,” “a white Toyota Land Cruiser speckled with measles of rust.”

Above all, the mark of a good short story is a reader’s investment in the characters within pages of meeting them — and sadness at having to let them go shortly thereafter. This reader felt that over and over in The Refugees. It is a must-read. THE REFUGEES

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