Novel Without a NameNovel Without a Name
Title rated 3.8 out of 5 stars, based on 5 ratings(5 ratings)
Book, 1995
Current format, Book, 1995, , All copies in use.Book, 1995
Current format, Book, 1995, , All copies in use. Offered in 0 more formatsTells the story of twenty-eight-year old Quan, a North Vietnamese soldier who joined the war at eighteen because of his love of the Communist party, experiences the horror of the war with the Americans and the loss of a country he once knew
The powerful, personal story of Vietnam's war against Americans as experienced by North Vietnamese soldiers and villagers on the front lines offers an unforgettable tale of struggle and loss from the author of Paradise of the Blind. 15,000 first printing.
A piercing, unforgettable tale of the horror and spiritual weariness of war, Novel Without a Name will shatter every preconception Americans have about what happened in the jungles of Vietnam. With Duong Thu Huong, whose Paradise of the Blind was published to high critical acclaim in 1993, Vietnam has found a voice both lyrical and stark, powerful enough to capture the conflict that left millions dead and spiritually destroyed her generation.
Banned in the author's native country for its scathing dissection of the day-to-day realities of life for the Vietnamese during the final years of the "Vietnam War," Novel Without a Name invites comparison with All Quiet on the Western Front and other classic works of war fiction. The war is seen through the eyes of Quan, a North Vietnamese bo doi (soldier of the people) who joined the army at eighteen, full of idealism and love for the Communist party and its cause of national liberation. But ten years later, after leading his platoon through almost a decade of unimaginable horror and deprivation, Quan is disillusioned by his odyssey of loss and struggle. Furloughed back to his village in search of a fellow soldier, Quan undertakes a harrowing, solitary journey through the tortuous jungles of central Vietnam and his own unspeakable memories.
The powerful, personal story of Vietnam's war against Americans as experienced by North Vietnamese soldiers and villagers on the front lines offers an unforgettable tale of struggle and loss from the author of Paradise of the Blind. 15,000 first printing.
A piercing, unforgettable tale of the horror and spiritual weariness of war, Novel Without a Name will shatter every preconception Americans have about what happened in the jungles of Vietnam. With Duong Thu Huong, whose Paradise of the Blind was published to high critical acclaim in 1993, Vietnam has found a voice both lyrical and stark, powerful enough to capture the conflict that left millions dead and spiritually destroyed her generation.
Banned in the author's native country for its scathing dissection of the day-to-day realities of life for the Vietnamese during the final years of the "Vietnam War," Novel Without a Name invites comparison with All Quiet on the Western Front and other classic works of war fiction. The war is seen through the eyes of Quan, a North Vietnamese bo doi (soldier of the people) who joined the army at eighteen, full of idealism and love for the Communist party and its cause of national liberation. But ten years later, after leading his platoon through almost a decade of unimaginable horror and deprivation, Quan is disillusioned by his odyssey of loss and struggle. Furloughed back to his village in search of a fellow soldier, Quan undertakes a harrowing, solitary journey through the tortuous jungles of central Vietnam and his own unspeakable memories.
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- New York, NY : W. Morrow, 1995.
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