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Tell Me Pleasant Things about Immortality
Tell Me Pleasant Things about Immortality: Stories | Lindsay Wong
4 posts | 2 read | 3 to read
From the bestselling, Canada Reads-shortlisted author of The Woo-Woo comes a wild, darkly hilarious, and poignant collection of immigrant horror stories. They’ll haunt and consume you—in strange and unsettling ways. Living forever isn’t everything it’s cracked up to be. Hearts can still break, looks can still fade, and money still matters, even in eternity. The ghosts, zombies, and demons in this collection are all shockingly human, and they’re ready to spill their guts. Vanity, love, and tragedy are all candidly explored as the unfulfilled desires of the dead are echoed in the lives of modern-day immigrants. Story-by-story, the line between ghost and human, life and death, becomes increasingly blurred. There’s a courtesan from 17th century China who, try as she might, just can’t manage to die. Grandmama Wu, who returns from the dead to protect her grandchildren from bullies. Not to mention an Internet-order bride who inadvertently brings the apocalypse to Nebraska City. From Shanghai to Vancouver, the women in this collection haunt and are haunted—by first loves, troublesome family members, and traumatic memories. Intertwining horror, the supernatural, and mythology, Tell Me Pleasant Things about Immortality riotously critiques contemporary life and fearlessly illuminates the ways in which the past can devour us. A collection about transformation and what makes us human, it solidifies Lindsay Wong as one of the most vital and electrifying voices in Canadian literature today.
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Lindy
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These devilish stories set in China & North America feature varying degrees of horror & the supernatural. The difficulty in maintaining one‘s complexion (& fingers & toes) after 380 years of life. The unquiet dead, including a hair-eating grandmother & ghosts with corrosive red tongues. Fox spirits in a campus sorority. Frog-women. All highly entertaining, and I highly recommend the audiobook read by four different narrators. #CanadianAuthor

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Lindy
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When he looked back at his father again, he felt something matchy-matchy rattling around in his intestines. There was an ugly void inside his family where their souls, like a hearty blob of red bean pastry filling, should have been.

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Lindy
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It is a general rule that happy people do not thrive in apocalypses. No one, not even the Universe, will suffer a false-faced shit-eating optimist.

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Lindy
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It was the year of the snake, the year of perpetual and extraordinary sorrow, when my father turned into a sofa.

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