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W**D
"My ghost is in pieces:" another masterpiece by Ocean Vuong
When Ocean Vuong's On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous was published, the book club group I was facilitating at the time wondered if the author would be able to make the transition from poet to full-fledged novelist---because the first novel flew primarily on the wings of poetry.His second novel---The Emperor of Gladness--- does seem to lack the poetry of his first book. Nevertheless, it is poignant and powerful---and it is at its very best when the author explores the profound and touching relationship between the central protagonist Hai and the demented old woman Grazina. Grazina is, in fact, the glue that holds this book together. And yet, the novel's other characters who live in the fast-food world of Home Market, are just as significant in their own way and connect powerfully to the mood, tone and themes of the author's book.The novel does seem pretty dismal, and I was reminded again and again of its epigraph from Act 4, scene 3 of Hamlet: the true emperor of the world is the worm. "We fat ourselves for maggots."So, the world is a wasteland of sorts in which, in the end, the American Dream ends most logically in a nursing home or in a dumpster where we sit contemplating stars in the night sky that we can neither reach nor comprehend. Where is the beauty in our lives? "What good is beauty if nobody wins?" The lies we tell ourselves and one another. The delusions we use to cope with trauma, with the brutality of war and the senseless slaughter of humans and animals. The numbing realities of our existences. It is all pretty grim.But the writing is breathtaking, and many of the scenes in this novel are unforgettable and brilliant, including a pill-popping Hai (as "Sgt. Pepper") sitting in a bathtub with the demented Grazina as they take a midnight ride in a "jeep" that sweeps them across war-torn Europe on their way to the battlefields of Gettysburg. And the final section of the novel (Spring) is so powerfully imagined and rendered that the last pages of the book might leave you in tears.What are we? Who are we supposed to be? Do we ever rise above the level of our own mediocrity? What happens now? The Emperor of Gladness provides much food for thought, and I can only continue to admire its sensitive and intuitive author who is so very young and yet writes with such compassion and wisdom.
M**L
Stick with it.
The writing is wonderful. Story was a little off track at times.
B**R
Overloaded with too many poetic images that impede the story's flow
I have bought 'The Emperor of Gladness", after watching Ocean Vuong'd interview on Oprah Winfrey's award show plus a couple of other rich interviews. Ocean is a poet of great talent. His generous character is attractive and his 1940's quote of Simone Weil that 'Attention is the rarest and purest form of generosity" is telling about himself.However, I have difficulty reading Ocean's novel. Almost every sentence of "The Emperor" is overloaded with poetic imagery. Reading this novel feels like trying to cross a room floor filled with flowerpots of all shapes and height standing everywhere, which you keep hitting at every step. I was tired after three chapters.Ocean Vuong still has a way to go before his prose reaches the powerful clarity and poetry that flows with the narrative and moves the reader forward of novels of Korean writer Han Kang, who won the Nobel this year.
D**R
Profound, Lyrical, and Memorable
Ocean Vuong’s writing always moves me. This story of empathy and connection complicated by the real struggles of poverty, drug addiction, and the machinations of fast food work is beautifully rendered. Hai is complex and caring yet deceptive and damaged. He is wholly human, and as such he has moments of grace that made me trust in his ability to transcend his circumstances.
P**L
A genius of a writer with an incredible story to tell
Tough emotional story but brilliant writing. Improbable match up of characters but it worked! I couldn’t put it down —hooked by the beauty of friendships in a crazy worldOprah’s interview of author is so right on. Amazing talent. I knew he must also be a poet.
D**J
Dickens in 2010
“[I]t wasn’t that I was happy—but that I was okay. And okay was even better than happy because I thought it had a better chance of lasting.” (p318)According to the publisher’s official promotion, this novel’s anchoring storyline is an account of the deep, unlikely family-like bond between an 82-yr old Lithuanian woman and 19-yr old Vietnamese man, both down on their luck. Their relationship resembles a loving grandson caring for an ailing grandparent, and it changes them both in profound ways. But that’s by no means the only storyline, and it’s arguably not the most important one.More generally, this quiet, bittersweet novel follows the lives of a host of wounded characters struggling to get by in a world that seems to want to keep them down. Their friendship, generosity and empathy help them support each other as they suffer misfortunes and misadventures alone and together. At times the story meanders, but I think that's part of the author's point -- the story mirrors life itself. In some ways it all has a Dickensian feel to it. It’s nicely done.
E**N
A triumph of emotion and talent.
This is not just a new great novel, this is likely one of the best novels of the 21st century. Ocean mainlines emotion into your soul and makes you feel every joy, every sadness, every longing that his characters endure. His writing is exquisite and elegant, while describing the mundane, and within each sentence is a heart full of gladness. Ocean has birthed a triumph.
P**R
A Dickensian tale with no redeeming moral lessons
Unique storyline, Hai and Grazina are intriguing characters with a special relationship, along with the rest of the motley crew from his fast food restaurant workplace. But ultimately Hai is not a redeeming character who does not evolve in a positive way so for me it ends on a very depressing note. Overall this is a somber tale and hard to get through at times.
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