March 15, 2019
Review by Nancy Oakes
Not too long ago (and borrowing from Rodgers and Hammerstein), I was that girl who cain’t say no. As a result, I had tons of books to read from Netgalley, from various publishers, and from people who organized book tours for various bloggers. At first it was great and there were books arriving at my door on a daily basis. But there was also a downside—I started noticing that I had little time for the books I’d been buying that were starting to seriously pile up. So with a few exceptions, I quit accepting offers and got back to my own tomes which had been sadly neglected, and became a much happier person. But I will always make time when asked if I would like to read a novel by indie author Khanh Ha, who has been the recipient of several awards for his fiction. Mrs. Rossi’s Dream is his third novel, and in my opinion, the best he’s written.
Once again, the author takes us into the vivid but harrowing landscapes of Vietnam. The Lower U Minh National Reserve in the Mekong Delta is teeming with life, but at the same time it is also a place of death. During the years of the Vietnam War, as we are reminded, it was the “territory of IV Corps,” but it was also home to North Vietnamese forces and the Vietnamese civilians who lived there. Heavy casualties on all sides were suffered in the area, where all too often the bodies were not recovered -- in this place, “The dead remain where they died.”
U Minh Ha, from Vietnam Tourism
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Some twenty miles south of there, a couple in their late sixties own and operate a roadside inn for tourists, many of whom come to visit the National Reserve. Every day the husband takes a shovel and digs in the same spot, pulls out a bone from his pockets, and buries it. When the narrator of this story, Le Giang, asks the woman what he is doing, she remarks that their son, who had been an ARVN soldier during the war, had been killed in combat twenty years earlier but they had never recovered his body. This scene sort of sets the tone for what's coming, when a Mrs. Rossi arrives at the inn with her adopted daughter. Her son, Nicola Rossi was an American lieutenant who had served in Vietnam in 1966 and 1967, and had died during a firefight in the forest when a mortar blew up. He had been trapped beneath the trunk of a fallen cajeput tree; missed by the Viet Cong who likely would have shot him in the head had they seen him. Like the old man at the inn, her son’s body had never been recovered; she has come to the area hoping to locate his remains and to make another connection with him by visiting the River of White Lilies, a place she knows he'd been. She has nothing to go on except a crude map drawn by someone who served under Lieutenant Rossi, her dream of finding him, and a guide who knows the area like the back of his hand and who has taken many people on the same sort of mission.
From there the story moves off into different directions, mixing the past with present, as both the living and the dead draw on their memories to reveal not only stories of the Vietnam War and its aftermath, but also to reveal how in some cases, humanity manifested itself as compassion in some very unexpected ways. Mrs. Rossi’s Dream is a most human story at its core, underscored by the idea that
“When you held a fragment of bone in your hands, or a skull marred with spiderweb cracks, you couldn't tell if it was Vietnamese or American.”
It is also a story that gives prominence to the dead, which comes as no surprise in this setting. As just one example, there is an excellent short chapter in which a young woman draws on her childhood memories to describe a nighttime visit to a strange marketplace at the site of a deserted village that had been “shelled to ash.” While wondering about the “eerie stillness” of it all, she learns that at just past midnight at the beginning of the Lunar Year the dead return from “their yin world into our yang world” in order to “enjoy again our worldly pleasures for one brief moment.”
My many, many thanks to Khanh Ha for my copy. As I said earlier, I believe that this is the best he’s written so far and I will certainly look forward to reading his next book.
March 13, 2019
Guest Review by Nora S.
Memories are a funny thing. Sometimes they can take you back to a different time and place so effectively that they feel like time travel. Such is the case for the characters in Khanh Ha’s book, “Mrs. Rossi’s Dream.” It is a book about a group of characters who are tortured and influenced by the past in many ways.
Take for instance, the character of Giang Le. Despite not being the title character, he is the main character of the novel as the reader is most often given his perspective on things. Giang is a fairly peaceful and low-key Vietnamese man who works at a roadside inn. But through his recollections about his past, we find out that he was a prisoner of war during the conflict in his country and that he was imprisoned for ten years by his own government for defecting.
Giang is such a soft-spoken man in his everyday life that the flashbacks to his time as a youth and during the war serve almost as a window into his soul for the reader. Here is a man who has seen so much suffering and so many terrible things but you’d never know it from talking to him.
Giang is such a soft-spoken man in his everyday life that the flashbacks to his time as a youth and during the war serve almost as a window into his soul for the reader. Here is a man who has seen so much suffering and so many terrible things but you’d never know it from talking to him.
Alternatively, Mrs. Rossi is a character who tends to speak her mind and be forthright at all times. She tells Giang very quickly after meeting him about her quest to find her soldier son’s remains in the jungle and stays determined throughout most of the novel that she will succeed in her objective.
I thoroughly enjoyed the perspectives of both characters as well as the interspersed chapters where we got the perspective of Mrs. Rossi’s son, Nicola.
I found this book to be a worthwhile and fascinating read and would recommend it to anyone who enjoys a well written novel. I promise you’ll enjoy it. I don’t give out a 5-star review very often, but this book deserves that plus so much more.