
By Ha Jin
#aprilpoetrychallenge for #nationalpoetrymonth
25 April - time
Playing catch up! It‘s been a busy couple of days.
By Ha Jin
#aprilpoetrychallenge for #nationalpoetrymonth
25 April - time
Playing catch up! It‘s been a busy couple of days.
This book of short stories by Ha Jin moved me. Ha's sparse prose tells the stories of lonely, disappointed Chinese immigrants in New York. Many of his stories are open-ended, but do not feel unfinished. I definitely want to read more of his work. #6thBookof2018
I see the author has been awarded multiple awards, and I did appreciate the bittersweet snapshots of life as immigrants in Flushing in the 1980s that these short stories are. All the stories end on extremely incomplete notes - the future beckons, but the reader will never know how it turns out. Sometimes I wished for a bit more clarity before a story ended.
I was looking for something new to read in the evenings on my sister's old Kindle and stumbled upon this collection of short stories about Chinese immigrants living in the US. So far I'm finding all the endings rather sad/strange/slightly unsatisfactory, but the stories are enjoyable and moving.