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Paperback The Eaves of Heaven: A Life in Three Wars Book

ISBN: 0307381218

ISBN13: 9780307381217

The Eaves of Heaven: A Life in Three Wars

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

One of the Ten Best Books of the Year, Washington Post Book World One of the Los Angeles Times' Favorite Books of the Year One of the Top Ten National Books of 2008, Portland Oregonian A 2009 Honor Book of the Asian/Pacific American Librarians Association "Few books have combined the historical scope and the literary skill to give the -foreign reader a sense of events from a Vietnamese perspective. . . . Now we can add Andrew Pham's Eaves of Heaven...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

There were so many dark stories of the past

I had the book in my sight for days and returned it to the library then I borrowed it and returned it, again and again, until one day I had enough courage to sit down and read it and finished it in 1 weekend. I could have read it sooner and once committed to it I could have finished the book in shorter time but there were lots of things, mostly fear, kept me from completing the task. Most of the time when the book led me to the painful memories of the Viet Nam war during which time I was born and growing up in Saigon, I had to put the book down and walked away for a while until I've gathered enough strenght to pick it up and continue. Just like the author, I had similar childhood and upbringing, my parents are northerners of the middle class farmer clan who escaped the communist in 1954 to come to the south, my father was a member of the Nationalist Movement, the idealistic young intellectuals group which was decimated by Viet Minh (Ho Chi Minh) group. Unlike his father, my father never told us what he has been through before 1954, his life during the French and Japanese occupation was never revealed to his children and I am thankful for Pham for opening the window of his soul to show me what I have almost missed the chance to know. There were so many dark stories of the past, in North Viet Nam, that my father never told us, having read the book I came to realize the reason why my father never wanted to talk about them. The deadly struggles between the Nationalists and the Communists, the harrowing 2 million-death famine caused by the Japanese, the long run from Nam Dinh to Hanoi that he and my mother made across miles of rice fields and villages with my 3 older brothers and luggage in their arms and backs (I was not born until the family settled in the South), the French seized him when the family arrived in Hanoi and put him in the infamous Hoa Lo prison for a while. All these experiences I hear it second hand from relatives long after he passed away. The book had shined a light on the painful path that the author's father and my father traveled through, for which I appreciated a great deal and forever grateful. Had the author never committed to writing, Pham certainly will become a great painter with his gift of vision we found in the book.

Untold stories

I sought out THE EAVES OF HEAVEN after reading Andrew X. Pham's story of his bicycle trip in Vietnam, CATFISH AND MANDALA. Now I am reading Mr. Pham's translation of I DREAMED OF PEACE, to "see" how it is to be on the other side of a war. My wife and I were active protesters of the Vietnam war and participated in the 1968 anti-war march in Washington. In 2008, we worked hard here in Nevada to help elect President Obama so he could end the war in Iraq. We are anti-war people. Why? After reading the above books, I think it is because of this: My wife was born in 1941 in Stuttgart, Germany, a town that was 75% destroyed by Allied bombs. She immigrated to the U.S as a maid in Scarsdale, NY in 1965. We married in 1967. She never talks about the war in Germany, even though we have visited Germany a number of times. However, to this day, when she hears sirens she tightens up and is reminded of air raid shelters and bombs. Andrew X.Pham is a wonderful writer and translator of the horrors, humanity and inhumanity of war. He has helped to fill in the "untold stories" my wife never talks about and I NEVER bring up.

The Eves of Heaven

`The Eves of Heaven` is an "auto-biography" by Thong Van Pham. In fact it is written by his son Andrew, but he takes on the first person voice of his father Thong, similar to the technique used by Dave Eggers in `What Is the What?`. It is difficult to know how accurate it is, or what degree of artistic license is involved, but in a way it doesn't matter because as creative non-fiction it reads like a novel. Not only is the story highly engrossing, thrilling and fascinating, but it is humane. Thong never seems to loose his sense of dignity and respect for life despite the horrors of violence, drugs and prostitution that stalk him. The lush prose is deliciously sensuous in one chapter, then shifts to scenes of deprivation the next, like a master chef playing the pallet between extremes of texture and temperature - and like the fusion of French and Asian culture that is Vietnam. `The Eaves of Heaven` covers over 30 years of war in Vietnam as it transitioned from a "feudal" age to the modern world in one or two generations - the Japanese in WWII, the French and then the Americans. One mans lifetime saw it all from start to end. Through this wonderfully written, humane and moving memoir of a single life, I was better able to understand Vietnam, its people and its recent past.

My favorite book of the Summer for story, language, emotion, and more

Sometimes a reader is privileged enough to read a book in which the words, sentences, and stories just wash over and envelop you, like a gentle beach wave. This is such a book. I enjoyed Pham's earlier "Catfish" so much that I awaited this latest book of family stories with great anticipation; and I was rewarded. Whether I read this on the subway, a bench, or at home, I was immediately transported to Vietnam, where Pham skillfully describes the villages and cities, the triumphs, pains, tastes, loves, corruptions, kindnesses, terrors and fears of his father's early life (or perhaps lives.) Along the way, I learned more about Vietnamese history and village life than I ever knew before. Pham orders the chapters so that the reader moves back and forth between the decades of his father's childhood and adulthood, all the while progressing to the point we all expect, the fall of Saigon to the VC. As his grandmother taught, the eaves of heaven dealt good and bad in cycles. Devastating floods brought death but fertile harvests, childbirths brought the risks of a mother's death, and lovely days brought future storms. The lyrical sentences allow you to nearly taste the peach melba ice cream eaten during a courtship, but also let you live the terror of re-education and being pinned down by VC troops in a life or death firefight. The pure childhood enjoyment of eating treats and having cricket fights is a pleasure to read. But one will never again care for the fabled glory of the French Foreign Legion after finishing this book. I finished the final chapter just as NBC began to telecast the Miss Universe pageant from a colorful and cosmopolitan Ho Chi Minh City and Nha Trang, and all I could do is ponder the tribulations of this memoir and the amnesia of the telecast. Luckily this book captures a forgotten past with all the aspects that the eaves leave in shadows.

fascinating biography that look at the history of Viet Nam

From 1940 to1976, Viet Nam was in a constant state of war that impacted the people. Andrew X. Pham provides the biography of his father Thong Van Pham, who lived through the three plus decades of war starting with the Japanese invasion of the French occupied region during WW II through the fight for independent from the French and finally the war over the South against the United States. As a child Thong lived an upper crust life being born to a wealthy family. Over the years of war, famine and abuse, the family fortune vanished and consequently the life style. This is a fascinating biography that also serves as a deep look at the history of Viet Nam. The author rotates his father's life with recent events that brings a harrowing feel as the reader gains a sense of the outcome resulting from the years of turbulence. Well written, readers will marvel at Mr. Pham's capture of the impact of power struggles on everyday people. Harriet Klausner
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