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The Circle of Hanh: A Memoir

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With all the breathtaking imagery and lyric fury that characterizes his acclaimed poetry, Bruce Weigl recounts his struggles in the aftermath of the Vietnam War, which tore his life apart and in return gave him his poetic voice. Upon his release from duty he turned to alcohol, drugs, and women, living for years in a confused purgatory until he discovered salvation in poetry and in the love of his wife and their son. Yet it was only through a harrowing journey back to Vietnam, to adopt his eight-year-old daughter, that Weigl was finally able to heal himself. Moving from childhood to the war to a final act of compassion and hope, The Circle of Hanh is a powerful re-creation of a deeply haunted life and, ultimately, a stunning work of redemption.

224 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2000

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Bruce Weigl

47 books21 followers

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Kathie.
893 reviews
December 30, 2023
On my bookshelf for years, completing this memoir satisfies the V in my reading challenge for Vietnam as well as managing my need to better understand this war from a veteran's perspective. My husband of 51 years passed away six months ago with lymphoma caused by Agent Orange from his military service in Vietnam. He rarely spoke of his time there or his experiences. His worst memory nightmare was coming home through the San Francisco airport and being spit on.

The most difficult part for me was understanding the author's acceptance and love for Vietnam when my husband was never able to let go of his negative experiences there. And yet, I found this book beautifully written. The reader can tell quickly that Weigl is a poet. Through his difficult and painful memories not only as a child but also an 18-year-old headed off to Vietnam, he continues to return to his main story--traveling to Vietnam to adopt an 8-year-old girl and bring her into his home with his wife and son in Ohio, and how he grows through his life experiences.

I wish the author had further explained the mere mentions of the challenges with his son, how he met his wife (he tells how his grandparents met but not how he met Jean), and especially what was going on with his staying with his grandparents from time to time over several years and his parents secret about why he was there. What did I miss?

I liked this story, his explanation of the importance of stories and especially his explanation of why books were not important to "his people". This spoke volumes to me as I try to understand the "ignorance" in our world today. This made perfect sense to me and at the same time is terribly sad and eye-opening as I have been a lover of books and reading since I was 4 years old.

"Without my mother or father actually ever saying it this way, I grew up believing that books were useless because they were only words, and words didn't get work done. Words didn't put food on the table or clothes on your back. My people believed that reading history was a waste of time because we could not change what had already happened, and that what you learned in English class was a way of talking that you wold never use, and that science was a world where God didn't exist, a word that said we came from monkeys. 'Do I look like I came from a monkey?' my father said when I asked him. That was the long and short of it. There was never anything said in my house about how books could change your life, and if there had been, people would have laughed, or worse." p.48
Profile Image for Margi.
490 reviews
January 15, 2019
#unreadshelfproject2019 - Not a bad read. I've always wanted to read about the Vietnam war and the aftermath and I think this was a good book to start with. It broke the ground in an easy to read memoir. I found it to be quite moving. Weigl's determination to get to his adoptive daughter is a rather suspenseful part of the book. Weigel redeemed his time in the Vietnam war by going back and giving back to the country they took so much from.
Profile Image for Todd Crawford.
Author 14 books6 followers
March 23, 2013
Not gonna lie, I was assigned this book for a college-level Creative Writing class and I had little-to-no interest in it. I had things going on in my life and why should I bother reading this book I've never heard of when there are so many classics out there I've been meaning to pick up for years now?

In the end, I read this book in a short two days and was really impressed with Weigl's style. His story of coming to love a country his native land invaded is interesting and there are quite a few shocking moments in his upbringing. It's definitely worth giving a chance, at the least.
Profile Image for Jimmy.
Author 6 books282 followers
September 3, 2011
Vietnam veteran and poet of the Vietnam War, Bruce Weigl writes his autobiography. Surprisingly, the least interesting part of the story is his successful effort to adopt a Vietnamese girl. The middle of the book about a female babysitter who would rub against him sexually and his stories about Vietnam were far better. Way too much time was spent on a visa that was wrongly stamped. But I was totally involved in his life story otherwise.
Profile Image for Patricia Murphy.
Author 3 books126 followers
October 11, 2011
It was deceptive in a way. Felt simple in language and in narrative. But by the end I realized how carefully crafted it was. I could have read 100 more pages.
Profile Image for Nancy Nelson.
Author 10 books9 followers
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February 19, 2016
This is one of my favorite memoirs--a grappling with the horror of war and the pain of childhood by an award-winning poet.
Profile Image for Melissa Constantino.
7 reviews
March 16, 2021
New beginnings

Despite the trauma in Bruce Weigl’s early life he finds a way to make peace with his pass and gives his daughter a new beginning as well.
Profile Image for F. Service.
Author 3 books179 followers
April 1, 2017
Wonderful book. Unique view of war memoir writing and one that will move your heart toward love.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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