The Emperor of Gladness
Discover the Sunday Times bestseller about chosen family and second chances, one of 2025's most powerful new reads
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4.0 • 26 Ratings
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- $15.99
Publisher Description
THE INSTANT SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLER
‘Heartbreaking, heartwarming yet unsentimental, and savagely comic' Guardian
‘Some of the most beautiful writing I’ve experienced in my lifetime’ Oprah Winfrey
READERS ARE OBSESSED WITH THE EMPEROR OF GLADNESS:
‘Read it slowly. Let it wreck you. Then read it again’
‘I feel like I lost part of my soul to this book’
‘I would give it 6 stars if I could’
‘Sad and funny, devastating and quietly celebratory’
‘A masterwork of compassion and complexity’
College dropout Hai doesn’t know how to face the future until a chance meeting with elderly widow Grazina changes his life.
One summer evening in the town of East Gladness, Connecticut, nineteen-year-old Hai stands on a bridge, ready to jump, when he hears someone shout across the river. The voice belongs to Grazina, an elderly widow succumbing to dementia. Over the course of the year, the unlikely pair develops a life-altering bond.
When Hai takes a job at a diner to support himself and Grazina, his fellow workers become the family he didn’t expect to find. United by desperation and circumstance, and existing on the fringes of society, together they bear witness to each other’s survival.
This is an unforgettable story of unexpected friendship and how far people go to find a second chance.
'The first millennial Great American Novel’ ArtReview
‘His most vivid, ambitious work yet’ Dazed
‘This stunning book moved me so much’ CAITRÍONA BALFE
'A poetic, dramatic and vivid story’ COLM TÓIBÍN
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Poet Vuong follows up his acclaimed first novel, On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous, with a searching and beautiful story of a troubled young man. "The hardest thing in the world is to live only once," 19-year-old Hai narrates in the opening line, but there's a dark edge to the sentiment. The reader first meets Hai on a bridge in East Gladness, Conn., where he's about to jump to his death. He's stopped by Grazina, an 82-year-old Lithuanian woman. She invites him to stay with her, and as her dementia worsens, he cares for her—feeding her, bathing her, and administering medicine. The experience soothes Hai: "How strange to feel something so close to mercy... at the end of a road of ruined houses by a toxic river." Hai tells his mother he is attending medical school, but in fact, shortly before meeting Grazina, he was released from rehab for opioid addiction. Now, while staying with the older woman, he takes a job at the restaurant where his cousin works, and pops Dilaudids "to hold him over" during shifts. Vuong's scenes are vivid, and the pitch-perfect dialogue cuts like a knife ("Never cry in a diner," Grazina tells Hai. "They charge extra if they catch you. Believe me. I've seen it happen"). This downbeat tale soars to astonishing heights.