Reenactments
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5.0 • 1 Rating
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- $15.99
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- $15.99
Publisher Description
In Reenactments, poet Hai-Dang Phan explores the history, memory, and legacy of the Vietnam War from his vantage point as a second-generation Vietnamese American. Woven throughout the poems is a narrative of his family’s exodus from Vietnam that beautifully elucidates the American record of immigration, dislocation, inheritance, and ultimately hope. The poems are persuasively varied in their approach. The past and present, the remembered and imagined, all intersect at shifting angles, providing bold new perspectives. And, in a fresh move, Phan widens the lens, interspersing translations of several other contemporary Vietnamese poems to the mix. This subtle and moving debut is an important addition to the literature of immigration.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Phan's debut unflinchingly presents the trauma inherited through cultural memory as a kind of endless war reenactment. In these poems, even the most mundane setting is haunted by living ghosts. In "Spring Offensive," moles both overrun the speaker's mother's garden and recall the tunnels of Cu Chi ("Rain dripped from the million bells/ the morning my mother found/ her adversaries interred in the pond./ It was a slaughter accidental.") Elsewhere, a cousin stores fish in a well until they can be eaten, which echoes an uncle's imprisonment in a reeducation camp. Throughout these poems, the graphic news coverage of the Vietnam War lingers, and the act of "shooting" with a camera presents a violent duality: "The sniper girl is favorite role because/ it's like taking pictures. The beauty, the beauty!' " These poems are unadorned and ominous in their vision of memory, a clarion that never ceases to alarm or awe: "What do the clouds have to say that they can never remember?/ A forgotten memory of their Atlantic crossing?/ The earth/ is the same earth, but different. On the shoulder of evening,/ lifted by palm trees, the moon still rises / half-emptied."