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Cargando... She Weeps Each Time You're Born (2014)por Quan Barry
Cargando...
Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. Mostly pretty good with some nice poetic writing, but it jumps around in time which is just a little confusing. Does make you appreciate the sufferning of the Vietnamese. Still worthwhile but not for teens, kind of an R rating if it was a movie. I liked the boat people section the best. ( ) i'm obsessed ok see, this book is beautifully written, which isn't a surprised considering the author's a poet, but it's also beautiful because it's so comprehensive in its articulation of vietnamese history sans americanisms. it tells of a history long before the americans came, and long after they left. it's a book about VIETNAM. and i like history written in such a poetic, opaque style because i'm captured by the country, its history and its people. i know jack about vietnam aside from the vietnam war and i feel compelled to learn more. and more. THE SYMPATHIZER is on my tbr and I can't wait. also the SEA region is so popular among western solo backpackers because it offers really budget-friendly travel, and i'm a travel enthusiast myself so i've obviously been low-key planning a huge trip around SEA for awhile, but now i think i need to take a step back. one day when i walk in vietnam i need to acknowledge being american and understand being vietnamese (metaphorically bc i am not actually vietnamese & have no ties to vietnam) - whether as a northerner, a southerner, an ethnic minority, or otherwise. i need to really feel it, in the all-encompassing way that rabbit hears the dead. Vietnam's history is violent and tragic and yet as Westerner's we often only see it from our point of view. In this debut, Quan Barry attempts to tell us the story from the other side. The book opens towards the end of the Vietnam war with the birth of a child under the light of the Rabbit Moon. The story weaves her life together in bits and pieces, sometimes jumping through time, though always in a linear fashion. It tells us the story of a girl whose life starts in abject fear and poverty in the south of Vietnam, migration at the wars conclusion, reeducation camps, her rise to fame as the northerns tried to quash any mention or sympathy for the south, and her subsequent downfall. This is a moving story. I learned much about Vietnam and what it was really like for the average person living there. Rabbit was a fascinating character. I truly came to care what happened to her. None of the other characters ever came to life for me though. It was as if they were all background to the one character the author seemed to really care about. Additionally this book was filled with magical realism. Sometimes this works for me, and sometimes it doesn't. In this case it was a bit of some and a bit of the other. Rabbit's ability to hear the voices of the dead allowed the story of Vietnam to be told in an unique manner. Without it, she would have had a much more difficult time showing the reader what happened there. That said, the magical abilities of others such as the silent Qui and the ever young Linh made absolutely no sense to me, and I'm not sure why they were necessary. In the end those elements brought this book down from a strong four stars to something closer to 3 1/2. It was a strong debut and I look forward to seeing what else the author is capable of publishing. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
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A young girl born under mysterious circumstances a few years before the reunification of Vietnam possesses the otherworldly ability to hear the voices of the dead. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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