Ratings26
Average rating4
This collection of nine short stories reflects on the generational trauma of the Khmer Rouge through the perspective of the Cambodian community of Stockton, CA. The stories tie into each other nicely such that it reads like a cohesive whole, and shows characters at different points in their lives and through different lenses to show the interconnection of this community, and the ways that such intense violence and loss refuses to be contained in one location or one point in time.
I found this equally funny and devastating, and a deep-dive into a culture that I knew next to nothing about. There's an added weight knowing this is a tragically posthumous work. It did read to me like a first collection, lacking the maturity of a more seasoned writer. But it shows such promise, and so it's really sad that this is all we'll have from Anthony Veasna So.
I'm ashamed to say that I didn't know of Anthony Veasna So until reading his obituary in The New York Times, and now that I've read this collection I'm saddened anew at the loss of this bright young author.
I normally prefer novels to short stories, but just a single line from that obituary compelled me to immediately add Afterparties to the top of my reading queue. I'm happy to say that that impulse was well-founded, as the rest of the collection is just as sharp, original, and darkly funny as I could have hoped for. Those who have read the piece have perhaps guessed, but for the curious, the aforementioned line was:
Tevy, he writes, would “do something as simple as drink a glass of ice water, and her father, from across the room, would bellow, “There were no ice cubes in the genocide!”
These sentiments pervade the collection, and the central tension of many of the stories is generational: parents dealing with the trauma of staggering loss and the pressures of surviving in a new country, and their children, whose problems are minor by comparison but no less consuming. These children, who So centers more often than the older generation, struggle in trying to understand and honor the past, while grappling with the uncertainties of their own futures. He captures this beautifully in the last story of the collection, which is also perhaps the most intimate. The story, “Generational Differences,” takes the form of a letter from a mother to her intensely and morbidly curious son, who can't stop asking about “the regime, the camps, the genocide.” The mother writes:
Every slight detail you would demand to know, as if understanding that part of my life would explain the entirety of yours.
The title is a giveaway, but So was fascinated with what comes after: after the genocide, after immigrating, after college, after the mass shooting, after death. I'm sad that we won't get to see what would have come after Afterparties, because I'm certain it would have been fantastic.
Thanks to Ecco for the ARC.
i mean this is the truth of Cambodian Americans isn't it? we are just people living, defined yet not defined by our history.
thank you Anthony So for showing me what fiction that represents me can look like
Really strong stories about a specific section of Asian America's diaspora that I was unfamiliar with. Not all of these stories worked for men, but as the book progressed I found them more and more engrossing. I really enjoyed the way the stories and their characters fit together, and found the tone and style to perfectly fit the stories and characters being created here.