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The Sorrow of War /

Kien works in a unit that recovers soldiers' corpses. He knows the area well - this was where, in the dry season of 1969, his battalion was obliterated by American napalm and helicopter gunfire. Kien was one of only ten survivors. This book is his attempt to understand the eleven years of his life he gave to a senseless war.

Revisiting the sites of battles raises emotional ghosts for him and the memory of war scenes are juxtaposed with dreams and remembrances of his childhood sweetheart.

Bao Ninh, provides a strikingly honest look at how the Vietnam War forever changed his life, his country, and the people who live there. Originally published against government wishes in Vietnam because of its non-heroic, non-ideological tone. The Sorrow of War, his autobiographical novel, has won worldwide acclaim and become an international bestseller.

GMDBOOK
ClassificationF NIN
PublisherVintage, 1998
SubjectVietnamAmerican HistoryAmerican WarHistorical Fiction
Description

"The first critical portrayal of life in the North Vietnamese army ever to appear in Vietnam . . . The censors were evidently moved by the book's unflinching sincerity and Ninh's literary gifts." —Time

"Vaults over all the American fiction that came out of the Vietnam War to take its place alongside the greatest war novel of the century, All Quiet on the Western Front. And this is to understate its qualities, for, unlike All Quiet, it is a novel about much more than war. A book about writing, about lost youth, it is also a beautiful, agonizing love story." —The Independent

"Dramatic ... Chronicle[s] the wrecked lives of North Vietnamese soldiers who enter the war with blazing idealism, only to sink deeper into disillusionment and pessimism as everything they know falls apart around them ... Will force American readers to acknowledge how little they still understand of the long war that left such a legacy of grief and guilt in their own country." —The Washington Post

"Powerful ... Make[s] North Vietnamese soldiers human, wrenched by the same fear and pain as young Americans. A remarkable emotional intensity builds as the author mixes harrowing flashback scenes from the war with images from his pastoral youth, from his heartbreaking homecoming after a decade away, and finally from the nightmare calamity that ties everything else together and gives the book its tragic power ... Finally put[s] an acceptable human face on a group of people long without one. You will never think of North Vietnam and its people the same way again." —The Philadelphia Inquirer

"An unputdownable novel. It should win the Pulitzer Prize." —The Guardian

ISBNUVA:X006082836
Additional ISBN
9780749397111
URL
No.
Barcode
Branch
Location
Call No.
Status
Due Date
1
00772
SKW
High School
F NIN
Available
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