The Arizona Republic

‘Refugees’ is timely, timeless in telling of human stories

- RASHA MADKOUR

“The Refugees” (Grove Press), by Viet Thanh Nguyen

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 center 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-yearold “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.”

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