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An Immigrant Yearns For Connection In 'On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous'

Book critic Maureen Corrigan reviews the debut novel by Vietnamese American Ocean Vuong.

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Other segments from the episode on June 4, 2019

Fresh Air with Terry Gross, June 4, 2019: Interview with Jim Derogatis; Review of book 'On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous.'

Transcript

TERRY GROSS, HOST:

This is FRESH AIR. Ocean Vuong is a young Vietnamese American writer who came to widespread notice a few years ago with his multiple-award-winning poetry collection, "Night Sky With Exit Wounds." His new debut novel is called "On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous," and our book critic Maureen Corrigan says it's dazzling.

MAUREEN CORRIGAN, BYLINE: Here's an SAT word for you - aptronym. An aptronym is a proper name that's especially apt for describing the person who bears it - take Usain Bolt, the bolt-of-lightning Jamaican sprinter, or the poet William Wordsworth. Now add to the list Ocean Vuong. Vuong was given the name Ocean by his mother, a Vietnamese immigrant who worked as a manicurist. As the story goes, a customer corrected her pronunciation of the word beach, which, when she said it, sounded like that word that rhymes with witch. Vuong's mother adopted the word ocean instead. And when she learned that it refers to a body of water that can connect countries, such as the United States and Vietnam, she gave her son the hopeful name of Ocean.

In his poetry and just-published novel called "On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous," Vuong writes about the yearning for connection that afflicts immigrants. But ocean also describes the distinctive way Vuong writes. His words are liquid - flowing, rolling, teasing, mighty and overpowering. When Vuong's mother gave him the oh-so-apt name of Ocean, she inadvertently called into being a writer whose language some of us readers could happily drown in.

"On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous" is an autobiographical novel in the form of a letter - a letter written by a son named Little Dog to his illiterate mother. Dear Ma, the novel begins, I am writing to reach you, even if each word I put down is one word further from where you are. In that one line, Vuong, via Little Dog, has described the unintended rift that education can cause within a working-class immigrant family.

Little Dog was born in Vietnam, but like Vuong himself, he was brought to America as a small child. The Dear Ma letter Little Dog writes as a twenty-something young man in the 1990s roams through the family history, monumental and small. We hear how Little Dog's grandmother escaped from her arranged marriage in Vietnam and how her body, her purple dress kept her alive as a sex worker. We also hear how the remembered violence of the Vietnam War transmutes itself into the frequent slaps and punches rained down on Little Dog by his mother. I didn't know, Little Dog writes to her, that the war was still inside you and that once it enters you, it never leaves, but merely echoes, a sound forming the face of your own son.

And then there's this memory that Little Dog shares with Ma - the classic ordeal where the bullies on the school bus torture the outsider. It's one of the most familiar scenes in literature and film, but listen to a few sentences and hear how Vuong, through Little Dog, takes us deep into the shame and helplessness.

(Reading) Speak English, said the boy with the yellow bowl cut. Look at me when I'm talking to you. He was only nine, but had already mastered the dialect of damaged American fathers. The boys crowded around me, sensing entertainment. When I did nothing but close my eyes, the boy slapped me. I stared at my feet, at the shoes you bought me, Ma - the ones with red lights that flashed on the soles when I walked. I kicked my shoes gently at first, then faster. My sneakers erupted with silent flares, the world's smallest ambulances going nowhere.

There are extended riffs throughout Vuong's novel on subjects like Tiger Woods' racial heritage and on the word sorry, which Little Dog writes is the most common English word spoken by Asian nail salon workers. It's also the most common English word spoken by the mostly Hispanic laborers to their white boss in the tobacco fields where Little Dog works as a teenager and where he falls in love with a white boy named Trevor. Little Dog confesses to Ma that, Trevor was the boy from whom I learned there was something even more brutal and total than work want.

In an essay he wrote three years ago for The New Yorker, Ocean Vuong recalled that, when I entered kindergarten, I was, in a sense, immigrating all over again, except this time into English. Like so many immigrant writers before him, Ocean Vuong has taken the English he acquired with difficulty and not only made it his own, but he's made it better.

GROSS: Maureen Corrigan teaches literature at Georgetown University. She reviewed "On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous" by Ocean Vuong.

Tomorrow on FRESH AIR...

(SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "DEAD TO ME")

CHRISTINA APPLEGATE: (As Jen Harding) How do you forgive someone who hits your husband with their car and then drives away, leaving him to bleed to death on the side of the road? How do you forgive that?

GROSS: My guest will be Christina Applegate, who stars as a grieving widow and mother on the new Netflix series "Dead To Me." She played the daughter, Kelly Bundy, in "Married... With Children" and co-starred in "Anchorman" as an anchorwoman. I hope you'll join us.

FRESH AIR's executive producer is Danny Miller. Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Amy Salit, Phyllis Myers, Sam Briger, Lauren Krenzel, Heidi Saman, Therese Madden, Mooj Zadie, Thea Chaloner and Seth Kelley. I'm Terry Gross.

[POST-BROADCAST CORRECTION: This story previously said Ocean Vuong was born in Hanoi city. Vuong was actually born in Ho Chi Minh city.]

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC) Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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