The Vegas Dilemma, a collection of twenty-seven short stories, weaves a vision of contemporary America through the eyes of its outcasts. Set largely in Las Vegas, featuring a recurring character of a footloose, morose woman who likes to eat Cheerios in grocery stores, each story takes up quotidian concerns-staying in Starbucks past closing time, a visit to Hoover Dam, falling in love over Instagram-and mines them for their political and existential undercurrents, which fly off the stories like sparks from a pinwheel. A cycle of stories-"Pulverized Oat Wheels," "Mother Nature is Belligerent", "Symmetry of Provocation", etc.-make use of a vignette style to suture seemingly disparate scenarios and emotions. Thus, in "Not Capable of Giving her Leprosy" we meet a sexually exploitative American professor at a South Korean University; a reading group who meet in Starbucks to discuss the ethics of eating meat while reading The Vegetarian; palm trees that are mistaken for armadillos; and Walmart identified as a nerve agent. Other stories, such as "Your Sadness is Salt on Salt" and "In My Youth My Father Is Short and Poor," use a sparse first-person voice for more poetic effect. Connected by themes of alienation, bad romance, and microaggressions, The Vegas Dilemma combines the inventiveness of fiction and the richness of everyday life to show that such American tragedies as Trump's ascendency and the Weinstein scandal aren't divorced from everyday interactions, but arise from them.Vi Khi Nao is an unstoppable genius. THE VEGAS DILEMMA is zanily transporting anddeliriously original. No other writer has ever had me gasping this many times on every page.— Garielle Lutz, author of WorstedVi Khi Nao’s THE VEGAS DILEMMA is a kaleidoscopic jaunt through the lives of the outcasts and artists and lovers who reside in The City of Sin. Nao’s prose is as sharp and strange as a buried blade. THE VEGAS DILEMMA answers the question I’ve been asking myself for What would happen if Robert Walser time-traveled to modern day Vegas? You won’t regret reading these stories. — Alex McElroy, author of The AtmospheriansEach of Vi Khi Nao’s stories drops you flatfooted into a new world, finding yourself in a universe at once recognizable and fantastical, poetic and political. Each story lends its hand to a larger whole, but stands alone as an artifact of a place that never quite existed. These stories should be read slowly—each one a puzzle I found myself delighted to solve.— Adriana E. Ramírez, PEN/Fusion award winning author of Dead BoysTHE VEGAS DILEMMA is a saucy dinner date you wouldn't take for spaghetti. Vi Khi Nao has finally tackled impossibility and solved it. The gaze of this collection is toward a pile of raw and intimate donuts of temporality.— Ali Raz, author of Human TetrisA piercing and haunting book.— Jeffrey DeShell, author of Masses and MotetsTHE VEGAS DILEMMA reminds me of riding buses in Santa Fe, or my first morning off in NYC when I foolishly ordered a cup of coffee and started reading War and Peace at a crowded midtown diner with a line that curved into the street.— Jessica Alexander, author of Dear Enemy,
Vi Khi Nao is the author of many books and is known for her work spanning poetry, fiction, play, film, and interdisciplinary collaborations. Her forthcoming novel, The Italian Letters, is scheduled for publication by Melville House in 2024. In the same year, she will release a co-authored manuscript titled, The Six Tones of Water with Sun Yung Shin, through Ricochet. Recognized as a former Black Mountain Institute fellow, Vi Khi Nao received the Jim Duggins, PhD Outstanding Mid-Career Novelist Prize in 2022. https://www.vikhinao.com
Well... I typed out a whole, long review for this book in my miserable android app, which then happily ate the review. So here is the much truncated version.
THE VEGAS DILEMMA is a truly brilliant collection, but a few of the stories get a little abstract, thus not a perfect 5. Fun, clever wordplay like pun and onomatopoeia equals addictive style.
Rating 4.5 rounded up 1st Reading, Finished July 2022 Recommended for fans of contemporary literary fiction, Vonnegut, Leonora Carrington, surrealism
In the terror of stillness, Vi Khi Nao meets the reader with 27 stories set within the liminal space of our immediate history. Enveloped in the language of entertainment and consumer culture, we are solicited by characters shunned and excluded from the comforts of the supposed 1st world, walking the knife's edge of exile, starving or expanding into unregulated spaces.
Wanderers and voyeurs, online lovers, well-wishers, Elon Musk, and Sin City residents try desperately to realize themselves. Following an inverted hierarchy of need. Escaping the cruelties of American life. Sometimes, as if waking from a dream or just the opposite—sinking further into solipsism. Developing a brutal distrust of the other bodies moving within their orbit. There is kindness. There is wrath.
Still, no one is spared from history. From the Iranian revolution to manifest destiny to the slippages of presidential administrations, and, of course, the history of objects. The chain restaurants and standardized goods—the only solace to a world continuing to fracture. The apologies to the spaces disappearing and the disappeared people occupying them.
Vi Khi Nao is one of our most original writers working in English. She thinks and writes like a poet, challenging meaning itself while tackling painful topics. This voyage through Las Vegas and other desolate places filled with society's have-nots will haunt me for a long time.