The Refugees
- Genre: Fiction; short story collection
- Originally Published: 2017
- Reading Level/Interest: College/Adult
- Structure/Length: 8 short stories, 2 essays; approx. 224 pages; approx. 5 hours, 5 minutes on audio
- Protagonist/Central Conflict: The Refugees showcases a variety of character perspectives in stories ranging from a young Vietnamese refugee to a woman whose husband has dementia to two sisters from different worlds. Viet Thanh Nguyen offers a collection with common motifs of identity, love, and family with the hardships of immigration.
- Potential Sensitivity Issues: Murder; sexual assault; dementia; death of a parent; abandonment; homophobia; racism; xenophobia
Viet Thanh Nguyen, Author
- Bio: Born in 1971; Vietnamese American professor and novelist; born in Vietnam in 1971 to North Vietnamese refugees who moved south; family fled to the United States after the fall of Saigon in 1975; graduated from the University of California, Berkley, with a BA in English and Ethnic Studies; earned his PhD in English from Berkeley in 1997; Aerol Arnold Chair of English and Professor of English and American Studies and Ethnicity at University of Southern California; debut novel The Sympathizer won a Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2016; was awarded a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship and a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2017; is a regular op-ed columnist for The New York Times and writes about immigration, refugees, politics, and South East Asia; cultural critic-at-large for The Los Angeles Times; editor of diaCRITICS, a blog for the Diasporic Vietnamese Artists Network
- Other Works: Race and Resistance: Literature and Politics in Asian America (2002); The Sympathizer (2015); Nothing Ever Dies: Vietnam and the Memory of War (2016); Chicken of the Sea (2019); The Committed (2021)
- Awards: Asian/Pacific American Award for Literature Honor (2017)