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BY THE LIGHT OF THE JUKEBOX

Full of longing and discovery, this wide-ranging, oddly tender assortment marks a strong start for a distinctively gifted...

Eight tales of passing strangeness from New Orleans ER physician Paschal, a newcomer who proves no slouch at bringing an unsettling eye to the terrain where the fantastic and the weird coexist.

One of the weirder stories, “Sautéing the Platygast,” features a voracious family eating its way through a Darwinian paradise, as the retired academic father enlists the aid of wife, son, and daughter to pull one kind of bizarre evolutionary specimen after another out of the muck or the lake near their house, pondering each marvel only long enough to name it before stuffing it into a cooking pot and serving it up. More in the realm of the fantastic is “Moriya,” about a lonely teenage boy with mechanical inclinations staying with family friends and discovering the incredible secret of a beautiful, human-sized automaton, in the family for a century, whose repertoire of movements he expands to include things he must keep hidden. The title story involves a bar, a man and woman, and the stranger who enters, to be told the chilling details of a relationship gone sour, of things in dark places best left unseen, and of the wound that still binds them. The collection’s longest, and in some ways most engaging story, “Genesis,” uses the emergency-room setting for an encounter between an addict with severe internal bleeding and the tired, skilled, and extraordinarily ambivalent physician working to keep him alive.

Full of longing and discovery, this wide-ranging, oddly tender assortment marks a strong start for a distinctively gifted writer.

Pub Date: May 13, 2002

ISBN: 0-86538-105-4

Page Count: 146

Publisher: Ontario Review

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2002

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THE THINGS THEY CARRIED

It's being called a novel, but it is more a hybrid: short-stories/essays/confessions about the Vietnam War—the subject that O'Brien reasonably comes back to with every book. Some of these stories/memoirs are very good in their starkness and factualness: the title piece, about what a foot soldier actually has on him (weights included) at any given time, lends a palpability that makes the emotional freight (fear, horror, guilt) correspond superbly. Maybe the most moving piece here is "On The Rainy River," about a draftee's ambivalence about going, and how he decided to go: "I would go to war—I would kill and maybe die—because I was embarrassed not to." But so much else is so structurally coy that real effects are muted and disadvantaged: O'Brien is writing a book more about earnestness than about war, and the peekaboos of this isn't really me but of course it truly is serve no true purpose. They make this an annoyingly arty book, hiding more than not behind Hemingwayesque time-signatures and puerile repetitions about war (and memory and everything else, for that matter) being hell and heaven both. A disappointment.

Pub Date: March 28, 1990

ISBN: 0618706410

Page Count: 256

Publisher: Houghton Mifflin

Review Posted Online: Oct. 2, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 1990

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SIGHTSEEING

STORIES

A newcomer to watch: fresh, funny, and tough.

Seven stories, including a couple of prizewinners, from an exuberantly talented young Thai-American writer.

In the poignant title story, a young man accompanies his mother to Kok Lukmak, the last in the chain of Andaman Islands—where the two can behave like “farangs,” or foreigners, for once. It’s his last summer before college, her last before losing her eyesight. As he adjusts to his unsentimental mother’s acceptance of her fate, they make tentative steps toward the future. “Farangs,” included in Best New American Voices 2005 (p. 711), is about a flirtation between a Thai teenager who keeps a pet pig named Clint Eastwood and an American girl who wanders around in a bikini. His mother, who runs a motel after having been deserted by the boy’s American father, warns him about “bonking” one of the guests. “Draft Day” concerns a relieved but guilty young man whose father has bribed him out of the draft, and in “Don’t Let Me Die in This Place,” a bitter grandfather has moved from the States to Bangkok to live with his son, his Thai daughter-in-law, and two grandchildren. The grandfather’s grudging adjustment to the move and to his loss of autonomy (from a stroke) is accelerated by a visit to a carnival, where he urges the whole family into a game of bumper cars. The longest story, “Cockfighter,” is an astonishing coming-of-ager about feisty Ladda, 15, who watches as her father, once the best cockfighter in town, loses his status, money, and dignity to Little Jui, 16, a meth addict whose father is the local crime boss. Even Ladda is in danger, as Little Jui’s bodyguards try to abduct her. Her mother tells Ladda a family secret about her father’s failure of courage in fighting Big Jui to save his own sister’s honor. By the time Little Jui has had her father beaten and his ear cut off, Ladda has begun to realize how she must fend for herself.

A newcomer to watch: fresh, funny, and tough.

Pub Date: Jan. 1, 2005

ISBN: 0-8021-1788-0

Page Count: 224

Publisher: Grove

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2004

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