From Publishers Weekly
Vietnamese immigrants struggle with the burdens of faraway loved ones, unfamiliar customs and the scars of their flight from home in this evocative novel set in Galveston, Tex. Hai Truong is possessed by a spirit, a "ghost husband" who will not let her sleep or eat. While she is hospitalized, her daughter, Linh Nguyen, takes on adult responsibilities for her father, a fisherman, and her two younger siblings, even as she works to excel in school. Meanwhile, Linh's older girlfriend, Trang Luu, living with an aunt and uncle who blame her for their son's death, and troubled by the mystery of her unknown, American father, manages to succeed academically and be recruited by a private Catholic school; she also develops a crush on Lang Nguyen, an intern at the local hospital who, despite his accomplishments, remains bewildered by the American way of life. Gardner (Milkweed; Keeping Warm), who compares the struggle of Vietnamese immigrants to that of African Americans, fills her story with atmospheric details of Vietnamese culture and tradition, at the same time illuminating the uneasy ethnic mix of Galveston's lower-class community. Some readers may tire of the brief staccato sentences meant to convey her characters' disjointed lives and their lack of familiarity with the English language, but Gardner succeeds in communicating the bewilderment and anguish that at times overwhelm people torn from their cultural heritage and forced to struggle in a hostile environment.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
From Library Journal
Gardner (Milkweed, Papier-Mache, 1993) pens a sympathetic portrait of the Vietnamese refugee community in Galveston, Texas, introducing a variety of characters: Dr. Lang Nguyen, a medical resident from an upper-class family; Hai Truong, who is haunted by "the ghost husband in her head"; Hai's daughter Linh, who must cope with her mother's hospitalizations; and Trang, who is searching for the American father she never knew. Gardner vividly demonstrates the myriad difficulties faced by newcomers to America, movingly describing the sociology-language difficulties, culture clashes, and racism, both implicit and explicit-of a multiracial society. As a novel, however, this work is less successful because too many characters and too many plot lines overwhelm the casual reader. Winner of a 1993 Associated Writing Programs award, Boat People is a good purchase for libraries interested in expanding their fiction holdings in this area. -Nancy Pearl, Washington Ctr. for the Book, Seattle
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.