Ten short stories written by Lily Hoàng and Vi Khi Nào explore a range of styles from love stories to speculative fiction and fairy tales.
In this inventive collaboration, Hoàng and Nào blend Vietnamese, English, and Vietlish, creating a fresh, dynamic voice that captures the complexity of the Vietnamese-American experience. Their stories dive into themes of generational trauma, identity, and cultural clash, offering everything from love stories pieced together from memory, to folklore and fantasy, to post-apocalyptic worlds where Vietnamese-American identities are reimagined.
Timber and Lụa is playful, moving, and full of surprises. The authors experiment with language and translation, showing how meaning can shift and change between cultures. Released on the fiftieth anniversary of the Fall of Saigon, this collection is both a celebration of diasporic voices and a tribute to the power of storytelling across generations.
Lily Hoang's first book, PARABOLA, won the Chiasmus Press Un-Doing the Novel Contest. She is also the author of the forthcoming novels CHANGING (Fairy Tale Review Press, Dec. 2008) and THE EVOLUTIONARY REVOLUTION (Les Figues Press, 2009-10). She is currently a Visiting Assistant Professor of English & Women's Studies at Saint Mary's College in Indiana."
the blurb really described this book well in the sense that's it's a blend of vietnamese, english and vietlish stories that are VERY experimental. the most common structure was that the first story would be in vietlish (so barely any english words in there) to the part that for every page of story you have another page of dictionary for it. then you get the same story but now once fully in english and then vietnamese. i loved seeing how differently a story can be read just because of the language used.
then this collection of short stories also is just as experimental as promised in the blurb. i would even go as far to say that this is one of the most experimental/peculiar/strange books i have ever picked up. it took quite some time to get used to but it's both very creative in it's array of literary styles (different kinds of short stories, poetry, plays) as well as in the many different genres used, points of view and so on included. even on a sentence to sentence level it's really daring in how language is used to the point where at times i had to re-read passages multiple times and take in every word separately because these sentences were so bizarre and out of pocket that i could barely register what was going on.
there's also rather a lot of futuristic elements in many of the stories that are connected with absurd story elements and themes and honestly a lot of the stuff was quite sexual, there's a lot of mention of private parts, sex in general, fetish stuff and also way more sexual abuse than i would have anticipated. i'm not the biggest fan of that so that did lower my enjoyment a bit.
so essentially i would recommend this to people who want to really challenge themselves, who want to try out an entirely different kind of story that might be challenging on multiple levels like the narrative structure, the genres, characters, language and so on!