Chinatown

Translation: Nguyễn An Lý

59,00 

Chinatown begins in one of the Parisian metro carriages in which the narrator and her twelve years old son commute. It is the starting point of the recollection of her life story divided into a few periods: a childhood spent in Hanoi, where she eats the nutritious brain soup to have energy to learn, then literature studies in Leningrad, and finally, living on the outskirts of Paris on a small pension of an English teacher. Out of her mixed, caleidoscopic-like memories of various environments comes one recurring theme: her obsession with Thuy, a Chinese Vietnamese man whom she marries despite her closed one’s disapproval. Soon after she gave birth to their son, Thuy had disappeared from her life and lived in the titular Chinatown. It is the neighborhood that she keeps on calling, rhythmically repeating the same phrases in a never-ending monologue.

Thuận’s book is a chaotic, haphazard travel through one’s past, reminding us of reopening the same old wound. But it seems like it has a deeper meaning: it is an attempt to identify and tame the obsession of the narrator and the writing itself may serve as a form of exorcism. The story incisively explains how the Sino-Vietnamese war divided Vietnamese society after 1979, refers to elements of the Vietnamese culture and its customs, and tackles the problems of immigration from Asia to Europe. When you’re reading Chinatown, you have this weird feeling of being in many places at once – the fragments of memories are interlaced with fiction written by the protagonist and it seems like the chronology doesn’t matter at all. What truly matters is the recurring feeling and what we tell ourselves before going to sleep.

"I often think that he will have remarried. I don't write to him to ask. Neither do I ask his parents or Vinh. But I often imagine his new life with his new wife. I tell myself that I don't care about his private life. I tell myself that it has been nothing to do with me for a long long time. But still I often imagine how he is living with his new wife, how many children he has, whether he loves his new wife and new children. I cannot forget Chợ Lớn. I have never once been to Chợ Lớn. But still I can never forget Chợ Lớn."

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ISBN

9781911284673

Language

Country

Original title

Chinatown

Pages

184

Literary awards

Publisher

Year

2022

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