Grass Roof, Tin Roof
A Novel
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
A Vietnamese family flees its war-torn home and resettles in California, in a novel that offers a “brilliant exploration of exile, loss, and identity” (Robert Olen Butler).
Told from multiple perspectives and spanning several decades, Grass Roof, Tin Roof begins with the story of Tran, a Vietnamese writer facing government persecution, who flees her homeland during the exodus of 1975 and brings her two children to the West. Here, she marries a Danish American man who has survived a different war. He promises understanding and guidance—but the psychic consequences of his past soon hinder his relationships with the family, as the children, for whom the war is now a distant shadow, struggle to understand the world around them on their own terms.
In delicate, innovative prose, Strom’s characters experience the collision of cultures and the spiritual aftermath of war on the most visceral level. Grass Roof, Tin Roof is “an affecting study on the slippery nature of home” (Los Angeles Times).
“[Strom] explores the mysteries of loss, culture and identity, with skill, poignancy and imagination.” —Detroit Free Press
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Strom's debut novel traces a Vietnamese family's bumpy path to immigration and assimilation in California. Trinh Ahn Tran is a freethinking Saigon journalist in the 1970s one of few such women known for witty columns that critique all sides of Vietnamese politics. Interrogated and increasingly harassed by the government, Tran flees Saigon with her two children in a 1975 airlift. In California, she marries a condescending, authoritarian Danish immigrant, Hus Madsen, who frightens and alienates her children as well as his and Tran's own daughter. Strom tells the story from the alternating perspectives of mother, son and two daughters. Her description of the Saigon newspaper office and the flight from Vietnam is gripping, and she offers some affecting scenes of the family's tenuous suburban existence as well: a redneck accuses Hus ("Hoss") of shooting his dog in a tense confrontation. Tran's withdrawn teenage son, Thien, gets stuck in a paralyzing relationship with his girlfriend, Valerie, whose recitation of AA mantras drives him nuts. Strom's characterizations are uneven, however; she could have used a lighter touch in depicting Hus's cruelty, and the sections about idealistic middle daughter April and the trip she takes to Saigon in 1996 are less effective. The narrative loses steam as it turns to the children's coming-of-age struggles, which tend to be familiar fare about first sexual encounters and racial identity questions. With her spare, matter-of-fact prose, Strom shows promise, but she doesn't manage to sustain the narrative tension and acuity that distinguish the first half of this novel. 5-city author tour.