The award-winning author of Pangs of Love triumphs with "a work that manages to be consistently funny, infinitely sad, and surprisingly exhilarating... truly memorable." (Newsday)
The award-winning author of Pangs of Love triumphs with "a work that manages to be consistently funny, infinitely sad, and surprisingly exhilarating... truly memorable." (Newsday)
"Didn't they teach you anything at that school?" She clucks her tongue and goes to the refrigerators and returns with a bottle. "Oyster sauce is always good." The store-bought sauce is against everything I've ever learned about gastronomy. Sauces are the supreme test of a chef's skill. Often, cooking is the sauce. But sauce out of a bottle, some anonymous committee of tongues in a laboratory determining the proper blend of flavors for my palate, my dishes? I read the label: "Oyster extractives, sugar, water, monosodium glutamate, salt, cornstarch, caramel color." Why not ketchup? Why not Drano?In a last bid to set Sterling up in the only way they know how, his parents bring a "picture bride" from China to marry him. At the same moment, a relationship he had assumed was casual suddenly and alarmingly metamorphoses, as his girlfriend announces that she's pregnant.
Louie's much-lauded 1991 short-story collection, Pangs of Love, gave hints of his future development. In his first novel, as promised, he shows a narrative ingenuity as remarkable as his cultural insights. --Regina Marler --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An Engaging But Frustrating Read,
By
This review is from: The Barbarians are Coming (Paperback)
The Barbarians Are Coming is an interesting story, but altogether frustrating due to the main character's inability to act upon, or even recognize, his emotional response to any given relationship. His relationship to his father,his wife, and to a lesser extent, his mother, is frought with tension due both to cultural disparities and emotional immaturity. He rejects his Chinese heritage, but feels lost in his American birthright. His passivity is at once frustrating and an elemental part of the story. In the end, though, you just want to grab him by the shirt collar and shake him into awareness of all of the damage he has done by not doing anything decisively in his life.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Barbarians,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Barbarians are Coming (Hardcover)
This is a quality book with fine writing, but for me, was warming rather than deeply powerful. The protagonist, Sterling Lung, is a first-generation Chinese American in his late 20s. He's a passive, perceptive, self-deprecating but laid-back guy who's ambivalent about his heritage, as represented most strongly to him by his obsequious, uncool launderer father. Sterling falls in with a Jewish gal who directs his life for a while (children, coerced marriage; then "glamour" career working for her father). Things go sour, and in the end Sterling comes to his senses, affirming at last his Chinese identity and values and attempting to internally reconcile with his father. It may be a limitation on my part, in that I'm a non-Asian American woman, but the ending, in which all the "American" pieces of Sterling's life somehow dissolve away and he achieves redemption by embracing his family and heritage - registered with me as simplistic. Nevertheless, I was looking merely for a good read and was satisfied. I think anyone is likely to appreciate the evocative, amusing, and moving writing. END
12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Barbarians, Barbarians every where,
By
This review is from: The Barbarians are Coming (Hardcover)
From the start of the book, one knows that the characters are headed for disaster. Their lives are a wreck and there is little they will do to correct their situations. Barbarians, barbarians everywhere. Many act cruelly toward their "loved" ones. This is one very dysfunctional family. David Wong Louie accurately gives the readers an understanding of the depth and pervasiveness of the behavioral disability.Louie's repetitive use of the car was creatively woven with the behaviors of the main characters. The main characters went about their lives careening out of control. Regardless of how many miles they traveled or years they lived they would remain the same tragic characters. The characters carry a lot of emotional package with them throughout their lives. As a reader I was an observer. I got the sense that the main characters approached their lives as observers as well. They acted as if they weren't in the driver seat of their destinies. Instead they traveled as if they were on a tour bus, with very few reflective stopping points, inactively going where ever it would take them. It was an accurate painful portrayal of many people who passively sit by and let others' actions lead them. They opt for the coward's choice, freeing themselves from responsibilities. The book will carry the reader through the full gamut of emotions. It is brilliantly humorous at times and bitterly pathetic at others. The San Francisco Chronicle Online Book Club chose David Wong Louie's "The Barbarian's are Coming" for it's 3/19 - 4/15 selection. Chime in on the online bulletin board.
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