![]() Thúy's impressionistic approach means the book can feel rudderless, but the stories are poetic and powerful. The accounts of escape and arrival are exciting, but Ru is more about observation and atmosphere, and the doubts of an uprooted woman who wonders whether good fortune means enough bags to waterproof your refugee-camp squat, or enough money to buy a pair of shoes "whose price in my native land would be enough to feed a family of five for one whole year". ![]() Thuy reflects on the what her ideal American dream is by finding inspiration from the stories of those around her. Kim Thuy’s experiences are a perfect example on how the American dream is eye opening and a big struggle. Thúy's debut contains around 100 vignettes, some dealing with her journey, others delving into the strange customs of Canada, the taste of noodle soup and the fate of friends and neighbours. Throughout Kim Thúy’s Ru, the American Dream is very common. Born into a wealthy South Vietnamese family as the Tet offensive rages, she flees the Communist regime, endures a brutal boat journey and a Malaysian refugee camp, and emerges, cold and mute, in Quebec. ![]() ![]() ![]() "L ife is a struggle," runs a Vietnamese proverb, "in which sorrow leads to defeat." Thúy's fictionalised memoir adopts a similarly unsentimental attitude to a life of extremes. ![]()
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