An intimate, stirring portrait of a country at war and a family's battle to survive
Nguy?n Phan Qu? Mai was born in Vi?t Nam in 1973, and grew up witnessing the war's devastation of her country. She worked as a street seller and rice farmer before winning a scholarship to attend university in Australia. She is the author of eight books of poetry, short fiction and non-fiction in Vietnamese. Her writing has been translated and published in more than ten countries and has received many honors, including the Hà N?i Writers Association's Poetry of the Year 2010 Award. She currently divides her time between Indonesia and Vi?t Nam.
'[An] absorbing, stirring novel... Que Mai contains her saga with a
poet's discipline, crafting spare and unsparing sentences, and
uplifts it with a poet's antenna for beauty in the most desolate
circumstances. She evokes the landscape hauntingly, as a site of
loss so profound it assumes the quality of fable.'
*New York Times Book Review*
'The Mountains Sing is an epic account of Việt Nam’s
painful 20th century history, both vast in scope and
intimate in its telling. Through the travails of one family, Nguyễn
Phan Quế Mai brings us close to the horrors of famine,
war, and class struggle. But in this moving and riveting novel, she
also shows us a post-war Việt Nam, a country of hope and renewal,
home to a people who have never given up.'
*Viet Thanh Nguyen, Pulitzer Prizewinning author of The
Sympathizer*
'Devastating… From the French and Japanese occupations to the
Indochina wars, The Great Hunger, land reform and the Vietnam War,
it’s a story of resilience, determination, family and hope in
a country blighted by pain.'
*Refinery29, 'Best New Books, August 2020'*
'A sweeping story that positions Vietnamese life
within the rich and luminous history of national epics
like The Tale of Kiều and The Iliad. Expansive in scope
and feeling, The Mountains Sing is a feat of hope, an unflinchingly
felt inquiry into the past, with the courageous storytelling of the
present.'
*Ocean Vuong, author of On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous*
'A Vietnamese poet conjures history and fate in a luminous tale
that resonates across generations as one family grapples with the
psychic residue of war.'
*O, The Oprah Magazine*
'I learned so much that I needed to know about Vietnam… This book,
first and foremost, is one of the most significant contributions to
literature.'
*Natalie Jenner, author of The Jane Austen Society*
'Inspired by the experiences of [Nguyen Phan Que Mai’s] own family,
and backed up by extensive research, it's a testament to their
endurance; a harrowing novel which finds hope in the author's
faith in reconciliation and understanding.'
*Herald, Glasgow*
'A luminous, complex family narrative... Que Mai [has] an astute
and graceful ability to sustain contradictory truths about war,
displacement, aesthetic representations, and human nature... The
Mountains Sing affirms the individual’s right to think, read, and
act according to a code of intuitive civility, borne out of
Vietnam's fertile and compassionate cultural heritage.'
*NPR*
'A sweeping saga... Alternating between lyricism and blunt reality,
Nguyễn Phan Quế Mai gives us a vivid look at Vietnam from
within.'
*People Magazine*
'Nguyen Phan Que Mai’s sweeping tale proves on every page that
despite war-time tragedies and numbing ugliness, the human desire
to forgive and thrive soars as high as the mountains.'
*Thanhha Lai, National Book Award-winning author of Inside Out and
Back Again*
'A mesmerizing, devastating, searing and utterly authentic and
deeply human novel. Cannot recommend highly enough!'
*Lynn Novick, co-producer of The Vietnam War documentary*
'A glorious novel which sweeps across land, generations and
hearts... A rare gem that I will never forget.' The Write
Review
'A moving tribute to the author's own family, but also to the
people of Việt Nam and I wouldn’t hesitate to recommend it... If
you enjoyed Pachinko by Min Jin Lee, How We Disappeared by
Jing-Jing Lee, Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi, or The Island of Sea Women
by Lisa See, this is undoubtedly one for you.' Reads &
Reveries
'The Mountains Sing is an epic novel weaving together stories of
four generations of the fictional Tran family...The novel is
poetic, absorbing and illustrative of the enormous sacrifices of
the Vietnamese people, particularly the women.' The Green
Left, Australia
'Epic in scope, and a celebration of the human spirit, The
Mountains Sing is a story you won't soon
forget.' PopSugar, '25 of the Best New Books to Add to Your
Reading List This Spring'
'A panoramic epic... Like the work of Duong Thu Huong, who deserves
the Nobel one day, this book brings to life a crucial part of
Vietnamese history from within. Your heart will not leave this book
untouched.' Literary Hub
'Not since 2017's Pachinko have readers been given a
family saga as sumptuous and compelling as The Mountains
Sing.' PopMatters, 'Best Fiction Books of 2020'
'[A] lyrical, sweeping debut novel... Nguyen brilliantly explores
the boundary between what a writer shares with the world and what
remains between family. This brilliant, unsparing love letter to
Vietnam will move readers.' Publishers Weekly, starred
review
'An engrossing story of family, adversity, war, loss, and
triumph... Recalling Min Jin Lee and Lisa See, Nguyen displays a
lush and captivating storyteller’s gift as she effortlessly
transports readers to another world, leaving them wishing for
more.' Library Journal, starred review
'This multigenerational tale chronicles the Trần family as a
Vietnamese woman visits Hanoi and reflects on the life lessons
shared by her late grandmother.' USA Today, 'Five Books Not to
Miss'
'A historical novel that portrays Vietnamese strength in the face
of adversity... I came away at the end of the book with a new
appreciation for the courage and resourcefulness of the
Vietnamese.' Washington Independent Review of Books
'Told with poetic economy and intensity, [The Mountains Sing] is
dominated by the formidable Dieu Lan and her granddaughter Huong,
who find ways to pass on stories from the past.' Sydney
Morning Herald
'Widely published in Vietnamese, poet, nonfiction writer, and
translator Nguyễn Phan Quế Mai’s first novel in English balances
the unrelenting devastation of war with redemptive moments of
surprising humanity.' Booklist
'In The Mountains Sing, Nguyen Phan Que Mai has found a true
and clear voice in English that is rich and compelling the way only
those who come to English as a second language can sometimes
manage.' Bruce Weigl, author of bestselling memoir The Circle
of Hanh
'A beautiful evocation of a lost world.' Paris Review of
Books
'Elegiac yet inviting, this is a novel that delves into the beauty
and tragedy of one family in 1970s Vietnam.' Harper's Bazaar,
Summer Reading
'Beautiful, heartbreaking and utterly essential.' Saigoneer
Bookshelf
'Beautifully and lyrically written... The Mountains
Sing is historical fiction at its finest – it highlights the
impact and cost of the events that led up to the Vietnam War from
the Vietnamese people's perspective.' She Reads, 'Best
Historical Fiction Books of 2020'
'The power of this outstanding novel lies in the gradual
revelations of just how many personal challenges this family has
had to deal with... Hauntingly beautiful.' NB magazine
'A compelling and challenging novel that should be read as an
attempt to recognise both the presence of the past and its profound
effect on the formation of individual and national
identity.' Irish Times
'A vast, epic historical novel set against the backdrop of the Viet
Nam conflict through the eyes of the people themselves.'
*Ms. Magazine*
'Quế Mai's first novel in English is lyrical and at once
heart-wrenching and hopeful.' NPR, Best Books of 2020
'Lyrical, wrenching, sometimes painful to read, but ultimately
glorious in affirming the resilience of the human
spirit.' Julia Alvarez, author of Afterlife
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