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The Face: Strangers On A Pier
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Description
With his entry into Restless Book's The Face series, award-winning novelist Tash Aw explores the panoramic cultural vitality of modern Asia through his own complicated family story of migration and adaptation. From a taxi ride in present-day Bangkok, to eating Kentucky Fried Chicken in 1980s Kuala Lumpur, to his grandfathers' treacherous boat journeys to mainland China in the 1920s, Aw weaves together stories of insiders and outsiders, images from rural villages to megacity nightclubs and voices in a dizzying variety of dialects and slangs.
Author Biography
Born in Taipei to Malaysian parents, Tash Aw grew up in Kuala Lumpur before moving to Britain to attend university. He is the author of three critically acclaimed novels, The Harmony Silk Factory (2005), Map of the Invisible World (2009), and Five Star Billionaire (2013), which have won the Whitbread First Novel Award, a regional Commonwealth Writers' Prize, and twice been longlisted for the Man Booker prize; they have also been translated into twenty-three languages. His short fiction has won an O. Henry Prize and been published in A Public Space and the landmark Granta 100, amongst others.
Reviews"Tash Aw's The Face, so wise and so well done, made me with it were much longer than it is." -Chimamanda Adichie, The Guardian's Best Books of 2016 "Aw digs deep into the meaning of this move, the meaning of Chineseness in Malaysia, the meaning of inherited immigrant markings, and the meaning of leaving the immigrant perspective behind. He charts what it looks like to reprise history, to move for greater opportunity and more education, leaving behind those with less money and shedding the ancestral memory and choreography of poverty. " -Sharrona Pearl, Public Books "Aw always writes well, but this small volume is particularly lyrical. The extended essay format suits him: long enough for some structure-the chronology is not linear, and he bounces from story to social commentary to introspection-and to explore issues in depth, while short enough for immediacy. He covers a tremendous amount of ground.... Strangers on a Pier is a wealth of pithy observation.... This is a well-rounded, complete short work that should resonate particularly well with Asians who share Aw's multi-lingual, multi-cultural upbringing-and there are lots of them. It would be an excellent text for sparking discussion in whatever passes for social studies in Asian secondary schools." -Peter Gordon, Asian Review of Books "What seems most compelling to Aw is the process of forgetting and editing that can occur in diasporic movements...Aw is additionally invested in rooting out what is forgotten, what one wants to erase and to figure out why certain bonds become slack or covered over. In this sense, Aw makes clear that his creative inspirations as a writer and editor appear in seeing how relationships are determined only to be later made unstable by a contextual force or power... His approach to the work was more or less a narratively driven memoir with a kind of philosophical flair." -Stephen Hong Sohn, Asian American Literature Fans "Strangers is an intimate exploration of Aw's past: he delves into his family's history, retracing the journey that brought his grandfather to this country, exploring his father's personal history and reliving his own boyhood memories.... In the spaces of his words, the echoes of regrets and unknown sacrifices of the past linger; yet to be understood, but their presence felt and acknowledged. Aw fills the pages with the nostalgia of bygone years, probing the process that brought so many Malaysian Chinese to where the current generation is today, geographically, intellectually, culturally and socially.... Strangers On A Pier makes for a mellifluous and poignant-albeit short-read, and one that will provoke some soul-searching in Chinese Malaysians.... 9/10 mellifluous and poignant" -Diana Yeong, Star 2 "The Face: Strangers on a Pier offer a unique and thought-provoking perspective of a life lived out in interesting times, places, and circumstances. Exceptionally well written, organized and presented, The Face: Strangers on a Pier is very highly recommended, especially for community and academic library collections." -Carl Logan, Midwest Book Review
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