Phong Nguyen's Memory Sickness is a superb debut. These interwoven stories about characters living on the margins in Providence, Rhode Island, pulse with poetry, power, and grit. This is a truly memorable collection.
-- Don Lee, author of Yellow and Wrack and Ruin
Dead-on in its depiction of modern malaise, Memory Sickness will burn in your own memory forever, assuring you of the sickness we are. Phong Nguyen has crafted stories with zero at the bone, stories of how the child is father of the man, of what we do to one another in this world, and what we do to ourselves. His Providence, Rhode Island, seems borne into being by the bastard offspring of Denis Johnson and Mary a place of danger, horror, and the dim hope necessary for our survival. This book will scar you.
-- William Giraldi, senior editor at Agni and author of Busy Monsters
Rhode Island might be our smallest state, but Phong Nguyen writes about it as the stage for big drama in these gritty, moving stories about race and class and sex and death that are as fractured as the neighborhoods of Providence.
-- Benjamin Percy, author of The Wilding and Refresh, Refresh
Phong Nguyen is an Assistant Professor of English at the University of Central Missouri, where he teaches fiction writing and edits the journal Pleiades. His stories have been published in various literary journals including Agni, Boulevard, Iowa Review, Mississippi Review, North American Review, and Massachusetts Review. He lives in Warrensburg with his wife--the artist Sarah Nguyen--and their three children.
I read this book a few years ago and have taught many of the short stories in the collection. My students have found Nguyen’s stories as relatable and emotionally intense as I do. These deftly-told stories evoke the pain of adolescence, and the poetry of place. Complex, powerful and engaging. Nguyen is a writer to pay attention to.
I think story collections are one of the hardest things to review fairly, as you're asking the writer to knock it out of the park with each story and feeling disappointed if she or he doesn't. I'm rating Memory Sickness Five stars not because I think every story is dynamite; some I felt were, in comparison to the incredible ones, a little thin. Yet those that are incredible, like the title story, which opens the book, and the last story, "The Ballad of John Gray," which thematically and even plotwise manages to unite the disparate threads of this award-winning collection, are indeed stories that haunt and inspire and reward the reader.
Memory Sickness is a little like Dubliners with Providence, RI as the setting, with a cast of characters who move in and out of the stories. From his accomplishment with this collection, I both want Phong Nguyen to keep writing stories and write a novel. He's exceptional in the small moments and has the guts to alternate point of view, which hardly anyone does anymore in short stories. I love his immigrant and native characters and the way he captures voices that sound both as raw as speech but as reflective as retrospective. He's pretty damned good, Phong Nguyen, and I'm glad he won this prize from Elixir Press that resulted in an exceptional book's publication.
Powerful short stories, and all well worth reading. I felt the beginning ones were the strongest in the collection, but there was enough variety and tension as the book progressed that I never got bored, and will certainly search out more of Nguyen's work. If you're a fan of short fiction, this is worth finding.