Thanks to NetGalley and Sebastian Thach for this ARC in exchange for my honest review.
I wasn’t entirely sure what to expect going into this book, but what I got was a bitter-sweet story of a man whose life was completely changed because of the Vietnam War.
The story itself was very easy to consume, with quick chapters that had me reading the entire book in about 2 hours.
However, I’m not sure if I particularly enjoyed the execution of the book. Although there were very painful and emotional moments, something about the situation made it difficult to connect with in a much more personal way. Perhaps it's because we are being told this story from a future date, so the stakes for Luc aren’t high. Maybe it’s the writing style, I’m not too sure.
One thing that was very hard for me to understand, is the political stance the book is taking. When it comes to such a difficult topic, such as war, typically the narrative take some sort of stance. However, at times I felt like I was getting a variety of opinions, not just from the characters but from the story itself. It made it difficult to place what the ultimate theme of the novel is. Many of the characters seem to take a pacifist stance, and the narrative seems to reflect that at times, at other times it seems there are strong anti-communist sentiments (and glorification of the US aid), and then a few chapters later we’ll have the mentioning of the numerous war crimes the USA committed there. Though I think it’s okay for characters to have shifting and contradicting feelings about war, the narrative should be very clear about what it’s trying to convey. If that idea is that: war is bad and all sides are wrong and do cruel things, then that's fine, but the story didn’t feel like it consistently reflected that ideology. It can be very hard to put feelings about war to page, and whether that would mean the author ultimately chooses a side or speaks about the horrors of war, that would be okay. But it needs to be clearer.
Overall I think there were some very strong moments, enough to keep me compelled to keep reading, but it just didn’t connect with me in the way similar stories (in different backdrops) do.