ON EARTH WE'RE BRIEFLY
GORGEOUS (Penguin, 2019)
By OCEAN VUONG
Review by Hugh
Murray
One
recipe for comedy is to juxtapose the anticipated and expected to, or
replace it with, the incongruous. (This is not a joke.) One common
example: “Seven days without God makes one weak.” Poetry can be
somewhat similar, describing a noun with an unusual adjective, or the
adjective with an incongruous adverb. These surprising descriptions
can provide amusement to the reader, or they may seem confusing, or
profound, or a bit of all. Vuong indulges in much such word play,
some simple, some belabored. After telling of the long flights of
monarch butterflies from his home in Connecticut to Mexico, he
compares a book's page to a folded monarch's wings. Then, when they
open, will they fly away with the book? Too heavy. Admittedly, some
of his comparisons are poetic, and the reader can pause to ponder.
But sometimes the comparisons add nothing to the prose nor to the
thought. It is simply another stop sign on the road through this
“novel” memoir.
Vuong
provides portraits of his grandmother Lan, his mother Rose, and
shorter, more narrow sketches of his “grandfather” Paul, and his
slightly older teen-age lover Trevor.
But
there is so much that is NOT there! Vuong, born in Saigon in 1988 is
brought to America when he was 4 to live in poverty in a poor section
of Hartford, Connecticut. How did he get to the US? With his mom
and grandma at that time? His father too? All together, or in
spurts? The dad Vietnamese? There is nothing in this book about the
boy in school, who knows almost no English, and being Vietnamese, is
most likely smaller than most other kids his age. How was he
treated? And mistreated? Who, if any, befriended him? How did this
affect his character? Much of the book is about his mother (indeed,
the book is an epistle to her). However, even when he sets off for a
job on a tobacco farm at age 14, was this mainly for financial
reasons, or because of disappointments in school? Working with
tobacco his first day, his co-workers address him in Spanish,
assuming he is another of the illegal aliens working there. Vuong
was soon treated kindly by the Hispanic lead worker, who assigned him
a task he could do (with effort). Working there, the lad meets
Trevor, the 17-year-old white son of the farm's owner; Trevor, like
the hired hands, also works the fields. They hit it off, and in
time, engage in sex after work. After various explorations, the
innocent boys are both shocked and embarrassed to discover that
sometimes during anal sex, sh*t happens. One of the few amusing
episodes. Like Trevor, Vuong snorts coke, but declining to go along
with everything his older friend does and offers, Vuong refuses to
inject heroine.
Unlike
“white privileged” Trevor, Vuong receives a scholarship to a
Brooklyn College. Again, the role of the public school in this
transformation is absent. What, how did this happen? I would prefer
less poetry and more answers to how a small guy with no English is
metamorphed in a decade into a scholarship student in another state?
This might be quite a story from which many might learn. Meanwhile,
the “privileged” white male Trevor, over does it and dies at 22.
Vuong
returns to Vietnam with the ashes of his grandmother, but present-day
Vietnam is another absentee from this volume. It might crowd out
monarch butterflies flights or cliff jumps by buffaloes.
Perhaps
asking for Vuong's survival kit is going too far, but with odds
against him, he did survive and do well. Perhaps, the title provides
a clue – he and we all are gorgeous. But we know that that is a
lie. True, some are gorgeous, but usually for only a short span; and
some are not and were never gorgeous; and some are hideous. But on
some level after high school, we all learn that as pleasant as
eye-candy is, it cannot sustain us; we also require, need, the
ugliness of most proteins. For adults, the main meal is soup to
nuts, not much eye-candy. This short book is episodic, jumping round
in time, explicit on street names in Hartford and other sites,
inclusive of some Asian superstitions, echoes of war, somewhat
poetic, but omitting so much of what must have been important.
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