The Boat
by Nam Le
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The stories are so different from one another it is hard to believe all seven are the work of a single author. Each character has a distinctive voice that instantly sets him or her (Le is just as skilled with a female narrator) apart.
What they all have in common is that each one portrays its characters in a crisis that reveals resources of courage and resilience even he or she was not aware of. All but one of the stories concern what is arguably the deepest, most complex and most poignant of...more
What they all have in common is that each one portrays its characters in a crisis that reveals resources of courage and resilience even he or she was not aware of. All but one of the stories concern what is arguably the deepest, most complex and most poignant of...more
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Read in August, 2008
I was searching for a book to read and review for Virginia Quarterly Review’s Young Reviewers Contest and decided to try The Boat by Nam Le. This book matches my (and the contest’s) criteria exactly; the book I choose must 1) have been published this year, 2) preferably be a debut collection of short stories, and 3) have generated a lot of negative and positive interest among readers.
I gladly purchased this hardcover release for $25 at Barnes & Noble, thinking that I was doing this ...more
I gladly purchased this hardcover release for $25 at Barnes & Noble, thinking that I was doing this ...more
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Truth told, I'm somewhat floored by the overwhelming acclamation this book has received, not only on Goodreads but elsewhere. Some of the accolades aren't entirely undeserved. I, too, like its attempt to string together a series of international stories and varied narrators. Behind each story, I feel the presence of a spirited and talented story-teller. But all told, this is an incredibly uneven collection. I don't need to "get" each story, but I do need to trust that the author e...more
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Read in June, 2008
From my paper (review here):
Without the excesses of the Truman Doctrine, I daresay Nam Le’s gorgeously crafted first book never would have entered the world’s consciousness.
Historical digression (skip to the next paragraph if you know this already): The Truman Doctrine, laid out in 1947, says that “it must be the policy of the United States to support...more
Without the excesses of the Truman Doctrine, I daresay Nam Le’s gorgeously crafted first book never would have entered the world’s consciousness.
Historical digression (skip to the next paragraph if you know this already): The Truman Doctrine, laid out in 1947, says that “it must be the policy of the United States to support...more
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Read in August, 2008
I'll admit it. I sort of fell in love with this book's cover as soon as I sawl it on the New Fiction table at Bailey/Coy. I hemmed and hawed, picked it up and put it down, then finally let Michiko Kakutani and Mary Gaitskill convince me to fork over the $25. What I got from these stories, initially, was a really strong McSweeney's vibe. I couldn't quite put my finger on why this was, but the feeling was sustained, and eventually I figured it out. In the first story, Le writes about a writer stru...more
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Read in May, 2008
It's funny, a quote that gets tossed around in interviews/reviews is spoken in the first story, "Love and Honor and Pity and Pride and Compassion and Sacrifice." The protagonist, Mr. Le himself, is asked something like, "Why don't you just write about Vietnam, Nam? Ethnic literature is hot right now."
Later, another friend admits to him, "You could just write about boat people, but I like your writing because you write about Colombian assassins and aging New Yo...more
Later, another friend admits to him, "You could just write about boat people, but I like your writing because you write about Colombian assassins and aging New Yo...more
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Read in June, 2008
*sigh* Where do I even begin with what went wrong with this book. It started off so well. Certain scenes are so well described that I was really invested as a reader. However, I hate the way he ends each story... or rather, doesn't.
The first story felt like a good introduction chapter to a novel, except it's not a novel it was just a short story on its own. In turn it made the story have a horrible ending with a quick sum-up of what the character understood from the events in a few sentence...more
The first story felt like a good introduction chapter to a novel, except it's not a novel it was just a short story on its own. In turn it made the story have a horrible ending with a quick sum-up of what the character understood from the events in a few sentence...more
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the first story is incredible. It struck a chord for me not because of the story itself so much as the structure and the broader themes--the layering and weaving of generational family stories. It seems intensely honest and human. Essentially, an alcoholic writer in Iowa, struggling to find a story for a deadline settles down to write his parents story. "Ethnic Story" is the title. The father, visiting, reads the story when his son is asleep and proclaims there are mistakes. Later he a...more
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Read in July, 2008
I have to admit, I am still ten pages from finishing this book, but I can't do it anymore! With the exception of the first story, this book bored me to tears. I give it two starts instead of one, because Le is a great writer. At fear of sounding like a literary agent, I will still say that I couldn't relate to any of these characters or their lives. And this is because the writer didn't make it easy for me to relate to them. Le is an excellent writer, but a horrilbe story teller. He never drew m...more
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Read in August, 2008
Really nice short story collection. The first story is almost autobiographical, and it's about the writer struggling to write, and everyone is telling him to write a story inspired by his ethnic heritage (he was born in Vietnam, raised in Australia, and currently lives in America) and he is resistant, but eventually gives in and tries to write the story of his father. It's the best story in the collection, and has a lot to say about contemporary literature and the way we view cultural lit, etc...more
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Read in August, 2008
Nam Le’s first book of short stories has a worldwide focus. The stories reach from New York to Australia to the South China Sea. Normally such jumps in narration would have me a little worried, but what’s so amazing about Nam Le is that he’s able to pull all these stories off with details that seem 100% realistic. Truthfully, I don’t know how he’s able to come up with the small details that make these so worth while. He truly has an imagination to envy.
Almost all of the main charac...more
Almost all of the main charac...more
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Just incredible storytelling in this debut-- Le is able to leap into the heads of so many different characters regardless of background or gender. He has each character's psychological profile down to a T. And before you skip over this thinking, "meh short stories, meh", every story feels like a novella. The only downside is... well, the stories can get pretty depressing. I don't think one of them ends on an "up" moment. But fuck it, it's beautiful writing and hopefully this ...more
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Read in July, 2008
In a way, this book reminded me of the structure and detailed beauty of "Lucky Girls" by Nell Freudenberger. Also, I had pretty much the same overall reaction to the book: I admired it, but I wasn't in love with it. Even so, I couldn't put it down.
Le's attention to detail brought a lush, vivid beauty to each story, yet I felt that he took too much trouble to complicate his characters. Doing so weighed the stories down in history (rather than let his characters breathe and act, the...more
Le's attention to detail brought a lush, vivid beauty to each story, yet I felt that he took too much trouble to complicate his characters. Doing so weighed the stories down in history (rather than let his characters breathe and act, the...more
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Wow! Beautiful. Disturbing. I just read an Advanced Reader's Copy of this book and was particularly impressed by Le's ability to create characters that all convincingly inhabit so many different landscapes and cultures. I was expecting a more specific cultural tone or flavor from this book--but the stories and persepctives are radically different, and are able to stand alone as their own worlds, which to me signals an astounding stylistic range--clearly the writer could have stuck with just o...more
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Read in August, 2008
recommends it for:
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These are quite simply some of the most amazing stories I have ever read. I am not typically an avid fan of short stories. I typically find them little more than character sketches (like E. Annie Proulx's Postcards) or short scenes that are surely a part of a greater whole but simply leave me with a literary hole. But Nam Le has done something amazing with most of his stories -- they smack of realism, the characters are full, the stories hold up on their own and are not just false starts of n...more
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Read in June, 2008
The Boat is a breathtaking & heartbreaking work of literary genius. Each of Nam Le's stories are a world so completely real & realized that they feel like a living, breathing being. His understanding of human emotions know no boundaries of age, race, country or gender & is only overshadowed by the beauty & mastery of Le's writing. For those who do not read short stories, please do not let that stop you from picking up this book; each story is a novel in itself. The intensity of c...more
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Read in June, 2008
Good stories, although I would not exactly call them short. In each of the stories, characters face life alterting choices, turning points that test their strength, resolve, sense of themselves. Read the first story carefully and think about rereading it after you've finished the others in the collection. It plays on the notions of writing, "ethnic lit," and the subjects of the stories in the collection. Two of the best stories in the collection are "Cartagena" about a te...more
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From the NTY review:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05...
" Mai, the teenage heroine of this story, realizes that she now understands why her father — who spent five years fighting the Communists and two years in a re-education camp — tried to live on the surface, in the now of the moment, not looking backward or inside:
An Excerpt from "The Boat...more
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05...
" Mai, the teenage heroine of this story, realizes that she now understands why her father — who spent five years fighting the Communists and two years in a re-education camp — tried to live on the surface, in the now of the moment, not looking backward or inside:
An Excerpt from "The Boat...more
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Read in August, 2008
I was very intrigued about this book after reading a great article about Nam Le in the NY Times: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05...
Overall, I enjoyed Le's short stories. He covers a wide range of topics and settings from Vietnam emigrants to revolutionaries in Tehran to street youth in Colombia. He plays with various wri...more
Overall, I enjoyed Le's short stories. He covers a wide range of topics and settings from Vietnam emigrants to revolutionaries in Tehran to street youth in Colombia. He plays with various wri...more
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A delightful and dazzling collection of short stories from a young Vietnamese Australian writer, Nam Le gives me hope that talented Vietnamese writers are yet to be discovered. Written in exquisite prose, the Boat travels across time and space, exploring a vast landscape of emotional and intellectual experience -- from the Vietnamese boat people in Australia and the South China Sea to the Russians in New York to the Iranians in Tehran and the Colombians in the slums of Colombia -- and providing...more
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