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Big Read 2018 - The Refugees by Viet Thanh Nguyen: Home

In celebration of Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month of May, Highline College is reading Nguyen's book, The Refugees.

The Big Read - The Refugees by Viet Thanh Nguyen

Please join us for the Big Read discussion on the short story collection The Refugees by Viet Thanh Nguyen.

Date: Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Time: 1-2:30 PM

Place: Mt. Skokomish, Building 8 Student Union

Sponsored by AANAPISI (Asian Americans and Native American Pacific Islander Serving Institution) & Highline LibraryAANAPISI logo                   Highline Library Logo

 

*Those who commit to attending the discussion on May 30 can get a free copy of the book. Email aanapisi@highline.edu.*
The book is also on reserve in the Library, available for 7-day checkout. King County Library and Seattle Public Library also have copies available.

The Big Read - The Refugees by Viet Thanh Nguyen

An excerpt from a short story in The Refugees

From “Black-Eyed Women”

Ever since my father died a few years ago, my mother and I had lived together politely. We shared a passion for words, but I preferred writing in silence while she loved to talk. She constantly fed me gossip and stories. The only kind I enjoyed concerned my father when he was a man I did not know, young and happy. Then came stories of terror like the one about the reporter, the moral being that life, like the police, enjoys beating people now and again. Finally there was her favorite kind, the ghost story, of which she knew many, some even firsthand.

Aunt Six died of a heart attack at seventy-six, she told me once, twice, or perhaps three times, repetition being her habit. I never took her stories seriously. She lived in Vung Tau and we were in Nha Trang, she said. I was bringing dinner to the table when I saw Aunt Six sitting there in her nightgown. Her long gray hair, which she usually wore in a chignon, was loose and fell over her shoulders and in her face.

I almost dropped the dishes. When I asked her what she was doing here, she just smiled. She stood up, kissed me, and turned me towards the kitchen. When I turned around again to see her, she was gone. It was her ghost. Uncle confirmed it when I called. She had passed away that morning, in her own bed.

 

Excerpt copied from the publisher's website, https://groveatlantic.com/book/the-refugees/