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No Man's Land (Hardcover)

by Duong Thu Huong (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Acclaimed author and political dissident Huong (Memories of a Pure Spring, etc.) takes a hard look at the long-term repercussions of war in her latest novel. The luxuriantly beautiful village of Mountain Hamlet in central Vietnam is the setting for the story of Mein, a woman who learns that the husband she married 14 years ago and lived with for only a few weeks before he was sent off to fight in the Vietnam War, has actually survived and returned to claim her. Though she deeply loves her current husband, Hoan, and their son, she feels pressured by the strictures of her Communist community to return to her first husband, Bon, to honor the sacrifice he made for his country. The decision proves even harder because of Bon's repulsive physical condition and the abject poverty in which he lives. In long flashbacks, the novel follows Bon through his war experiences, and Hoan through the troubled events of his own past and present, revealing much about Vietnamese society in the process. This technique humanizes Hoan and Bon even as they each idolize Mein and her demure beauty. The outsize emotions of the two men and the tropical landscape lend an air of melodrama, but Mein's more calculating sensibility and the complicated choices she makes to satisfy herself and society keep the novel from descending into sentimentality. Agent, Anna Soler-Pont at Pontas Literary and Film Agency. (Apr. 13)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
*Starred Review* Banned dissident Vietnamese author Huong continues to write lyrical, psychologically astute, and extraordinarily affecting novels. As she did in Memories of a Pure Spring (2000), and does even more acutely here, Huong evokes the beauty of the land, Vietnam's ancient traditions, and the timeless rhythms of daily life in counterpoint to the tragedies of communist oppression and war. Elegant Mien and her thoughtful and successful husband, Hoan, seem blessed until Bon, Mien's first husband, a soldier long believed dead, suddenly reappears. As Huong dramatizes in flashbacks almost surreal in their intensity and strangeness, Bon has endured horrors beyond comprehension, and is now a broken man with only one dream, to be reunited with Mien. All the villagers seem to believe that he has every right to ask Mien to forfeit her domestic paradise and join him in his hovel, and his misery. Privy to the anguished thoughts of each character caught in this strangling web of desperation, duty, sacrifice, desire, compassion, and rage, Huong spins a captivating tale precise in details and grand in scope. A ravishing novel that exquisitely parses the nature of war and peace, material and spiritual poverty and wealth, self and community, coercion and love. Donna Seaman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

See all Editorial Reviews

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 416 pages
  • Publisher: Hyperion (April 13, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1401366643
  • ISBN-13: 978-1401366643
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #471,649 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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5.0 out of 5 stars Beautifully written book, December 29, 2008
This review is from: No Man's Land (Paperback)
This is a beautiful book. The characters hug your mind long after you finish the story. All politicians should read it as it is the best anti-war novel to come along in years.
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13 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Symbolism in No Man's Land, August 21, 2005
How many people living in America or elsewhere have actually removed themselves from this war-weary time, when just or unjust its outcome has afflicted the human race in more ways than one?

So is it a reader's blessing to dwell into Huong's No Man's Land without getting bogged down in human's abyss of deepest despair and forlornness? Because without prior knowledge or preconceived notion of the Viet-Nam conflict: he or she maybe able to escape the author's unmerciful portrait of life and subtle but inexorable allegories to today's Viet-Nam.

While it is more refreshing that first time readers may not discern the political undertone in Duong Thu Huong's latest novel and enjoy its tranche de vie, a love-after-war novel that revolves around some half dozen principal characters, there is no escaping the larger picture for readers familiar with Viet-Nam and the author's background as a dissident writer, that her works have been banned and her prose considered underground literature in Viet-Nam. (1)

However, it's misleading to even group this novel under the underground literature genre. Her evocative and poetic style is as rich and sanguine as any bourgeois writer competing and aspiring (on equal footing) to uplift the human spirit despite its bleak human condition. There is hardly a trace of bitterness in her prose. In fact one can detect Huong's incorrigible capitalist `dolce vita' oozing out of her characters' thoughts and actions, so much that it causes an embarrassment of riches and makes one wonder: is the original sin in socialism is to curb human tendency to live the good life?

If it weren't for the fact that No Man's Land is a translated work, one would readily esteem it as a beautiful literary piece. Yet as it is, readers can only surmise and be amazed at how well the Vietnamese syntax and style are rendered (or embellished) in English, the exquisite prose flows so expressively and naturalizes it as quite as mainstream as any English writer would with his/her original literary de-rigueur tour-de-force, thank you.

Albeit fluent and well-versed in Vietnamese, one would be hard-pressed to detect - especially at the skillful hand of translators - even at book-length work such as this, the cramped style of translation, except in a few minor instances, (where mung bean is translated as green bean, `chim lon' as pig bird instead as owl, bamboo shoots as bamboo, certain misrepresented ca dao or maxims etc.) which are too trivial to detract from such great work.

Under Duong Thu Huong's vast panoramic landscapes (no doubt derive from her many first-hand tours of duty in the Annamite Cordillera) as well as the descriptive up-close and personal scenes, one gets the feeling of watching a director's masterpiece movie unfolds before one's eyes. The advantage of No Man's Land of course rests on the fact that readers could understand Huong's `stream of consciousness' narratives, which help us get in the minds of her characters much better than that of a film which may not be deciphered, however good the acting is.

It is Northern Central Viet-Nam, after 1975 at war's end when Mien comes back to her village of Mountain Hamlet from a honey-gathering outing and finds her happy life upturned henceforth; a quick teenage happening which seems buried deep in a forgotten past has come back to haunt her days and torture her nights. Bon, her husband from a short-lived marriage that took place before his going off to war 14 years ago, is now resurrected from the death and conspires with socialist mores and tradition to claim her.

While this triangular affair seems to singularly cry out for the stolen love of Mien and Hoan -- her beloved husband of 12 years (and peripherally, Hanh, their five years-old son) - it did not give the victorious Bon comfort nor spare him the agony of a loser's inferiority complex.

Unlike most of his army unit who gave their ultimate sacrifices, Bon came back whole but a broken man, only to discover that all the years of war's tolls and deprivation have taken what left of his lot and now even claimed his manhood. Afflicted with a battered psyche and chronic impotence, Bon stubbornly clings to Mien and his desperate hope at recuperation. Obsessed with regaining his virility and delusionary love, he went to great length (with Hoan's money) to make a mockery out of his trials and rehabilitation. While the long-suffering Hoan stoically suffers the hand that fate has dealt him, his travails would only begin when he learned of Mien's resistance to her miserable life with Bon, and provides impetus for him to start the protracted battle to win hearts and minds of the people of Mountain Hamlet.

Huong's artful portrayal of her characters is at once psychological and realistic. She does not so much make us hate the villain (Bon and his sister Ta) as much as pity and empathize him for his tribulation, neither does she elevate the hero (Hoan) above his human failings or weaknesses. She does not force us to take side between Bon and Hoan, between the reasonable and unreasonable, between openness and machination, selfish and undeserving or forgiving and deserving, but rather presents the stark and almost incurable social condition of Mountain Hamlet as a microcosm of Viet-Nam and see how we would chose to go along on her glimmer-of-hope plot.

While Bon represents the small and craftiness of men and Hoan, the basic of human goodness, the real parallel here is Bon as the sham, emasculated Viet-Nam Communist Party (VCP) and Hoan -- the benign and potential democratic force outside the country and what it can do to keep Viet-Nam hope alive. Naturally, the beautiful Mien symbolizes the passive land and people under the de facto rule of the Party, who due to its glorious but Pyrrhic victory gives it a shadowy legitimacy to hang on to the prize (land). But even as dutiful, voiceless and docile as Mien was at the beginning, she would begin to take charge of her own happiness when realizing she has forfeited it for an empty cause. Even as voyeurs, the readers would still recoil at the author merciless depiction of Bon and Mien's unholy union, a deformed offspring as an omen to a climactic resolution.

Eventually the reader's actualization of Duong Thu Huong's message and denouement would be:

There comes a time in Viet-Nam when the VCP will have to accept multi parties to survive as a viable force [the living arrangement under Hoan's roof where Bon, Mien and Mr. Lu, Hoan's trusted servant (U.N. supervision?) live together]. But this temporary arrangement could not last when the communist party's irremediable nature of one-man's (plutocracy/one party) rule decides to bite the hand that feeds it.

In the end readers would hope for Bon to redeem himself and coexist peacefully with people who try to nurture and rehabilitate him, but when Bon borrowed Xa's rifle to kill his benefactor, Hoan (in the pretext of hunting), even Xa, Bon's best friend and comrade-in-arm, could not condone this despicable act.

We realize when Xa slap Bon -- and the president of the commune becomes exasperated with Mien cover-up -- that Bon no longer has the backing of the social convention he once had. When Bon could not count on the people Mountain Hamlet as the VCP could not rely on to its own rank and file to do its bidding, the Party will have reached the end of its rope. Conversely, when Bon could finally communicate with his Sergeant in the nether world, that is when the VCP could no longer count on its glorious but ghostly past to justify its grip on the present.

And as a rightful heir to that past, Huong is entitled to her earnest hope and dream. Of course one can read and enjoy No Man's Land for its literal sense rather than read into its figurative allusion where one can be embittered with real life's peaceful evolution.

(1) With the exception of several screenplays, half of Duong Thu Huong's books have not been published in her own country (Paradise of the Blind were pulled of the shelves after the first run and the author jailed following her speech and its publication in the West): ("Beyond Illusions," 1985; "Paradise of the Blind," 1987; "Fragments of a Life," published in Viet Nam,1989; "Novel Without a Name," 1995; "Memories of a Pure Spring," 2000; and "No Man's Land," 2005).

Of late, Duong Thu Huong has garnered a faithful following in the United States and Europe. This is a double-edge sword dilemma for an author who is still speaking out against the "irremediably corrupt and abusive" Hà Noi regime. While her success with the last three novels may have earned her fame and economic rewards from overseas, the targeted readership inside the country has largely been untapped and the indirect impact of her work is not felt where it may do the most good.
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