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Review of Nam Le's The BoatEd Martini <edmartini@mac.com> For those who haven't seen this yet: A World of Stories From a Son of Vietnam An excerpt: This story, like many in “The Boat,” catches people in moments of extremis, confronted by death or loss or terror (or all three) and forced to grapple at the most fundamental level with who they are and what they want or believe. Whether it’s the prospect of dying at sea or being shot by a drug kingpin or losing family members in a war, Nam Le’s people are individuals trapped in the crosshairs of fate, forced to choose whether they will react like deer caught in the headlights, or whether they will find a way to confront or disarm the situation. The opening story of this volume, “Love and Honor and Pity and Pride and Compassion and Sacrifice,” and its singular masterpiece, features a narrator who shares a name and certain biographical details with the author: both attended the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, both were born in Vietnam and both grew up in Australia. The other tales in this book, however, circumnavigate the globe, demonstrating Mr. Le’s astonishing ability to channel the experiences of a multitude of characters, from a young child living in Hiroshima during World War II to a 14-year-old hit man in the barrios of Medellín to a high school jock in an Australian beach town. Mr. Le not only writes with an authority and poise rare even among longtime authors, but he also demonstrates an intuitive, gut-level ability to convey the psychological conflicts people experience when they find their own hopes and ambitions slamming up against familial expectations or the brute facts of history. Best to All,
Ed Edwin Martini
Ky-Phong Tran <ky@frequentwind.com> So glad i could join the Nam Le party! The first link is to my interview with him in the Nguoi Viet Daily News. The second is a deeper, more intensive interview for my new magazine, Asian American Poetry and Writing. All best, Ky-Phong Tran
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