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A Long Stay in a Distant Land: A Novel

A Long Stay in a Distant Land: A Novel

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Author: Chieh Chieng
Publisher: Bloomsbury USA
Category: Book

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Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
Sales Rank: 1251001

Media: Paperback
Pages: 256
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.5 x 0.8

ISBN: 1596910348
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9781596910348
ASIN: 1596910348

Publication Date: March 21, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Another entry in the ongoing rush of Asian-American novels about experiences in a world-not-Asian is A Long Stay in a Distant Land. Author Chieh Chieng was born in Hong Kong and moved to Orange County, California, when he was seven. He has cultivated an absolutely deadpan wit and sense of irony, and in this novel, at age 29, has made an auspicious debut.

The Lums, the Chinese-American family Chieng writes about, have a peculiar history. Too many of them suffer an untimely demise: Mom, 51, collision with a car driven by Hersey Collins; cousin Connie, 12, ate a bad cheeseburger; Aunt Julie, 29, stomach cancer; cousin Will, 16, heatstroke; Uncle Larry, 40, fell off a cliff; Grandpa Melvin, 62, struck by an ice cream truck. Louis, the narrator, knows why all this has happened. His Grandpa could have avoided going to WW II, but he saw a Popeye cartoon and was inspired by Popeye's bravery to enlist. "Grandpa had violated the fundamental law that one should not kill another. He'd had a choice. He could have chosen not to join the war and not to shoot people. For every man Grandpa had killed, Death had designated a Lum to be picked off." Who knew where it would end? And now, with the death of Louis's mother, his father, Sonny, is calling him daily to say that he wants to "run down Hersey Collins with his car, or crush his skull with a brick." Louis moves in with his father to keep an eye on him and discovers, in some of the funniest episodes in the book, that his father is a gansta rap-obsessed cuckoo.

One day Grandma Esther calls to tell him that Bo, Louis's uncle and her favorite son, has disappeared in the labyrinths of Hong Kong. Uncle Bo has absented himself for many years, but always kept in touch by filling out a check-list sent by his mother. Now, even that has stopped. Louis goes to Hong Kong to find Bo and, during his search, finds pieces of family history as seen through the eyes of three generations. Every family has stories, true and false, that become part of the dogma passed on to the next generation. In the last chapter, "The Dance of Good Fortune," Chieng leads us to believe that the Lum curse of early Death might be over and that story will become myth. --Valerie Ryan

Product Description

The Lums are cursed. Their early deaths come randomly, strangely, and often, be it by tainted cheeseburger or speeding ice cream truck. The most recent victim is Louis Lum’s mother. Now Louis must move back home with his gangsta rap -obsessed father, Sonny, to prevent him from enacting the revenge he promises. But soon Louis’s concern shifts to his uncle Bo Lum, who has disappeared in Hong Kong. As Louis’s search progresses, the tragicomic story of three generations of Lums in America is revealed.



Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Breakout novel from a new talent in fiction   August 14, 2005
Jessica Lux (Rosamond, CA)
7 out of 8 found this review helpful

Chieng's novel is a family saga, but it is no thousand page tome. Through short, funny vignettes than span decades, the reader comes to know the Cantonese Lums of Orange County, CA. In this short book, the reader gets to know three decades of the Lum family in surprising detail.

Chieng's timeline jumps around. It opens with Louis, the protagonist, adrift and barely thriving in his post-college job as a magazine fact checker. He is forced to move in with his gansta-rap loving dad, Sonny, to keep Sonny from trying to kill the man who accidentally killed his wife in a car accident. When Chieng fills in the backstory of Sonny's boyhood, Sonny's marriage to Louis's mom Mirla, uncle Bo's relationship with Grandma Esther, and the relationship between Granpa Melvin and Esther, the story truly comes alive. The family is unintentionally hilarious on all levels, from Louis's attempts to speak Cantonese with the correct inflection, to Sonny's love of rap, to Grandma Esther's famously dreadful turnip cakes.

This book comes highly recommended along with the other Breakout Books of 2005.



4 out of 5 stars Engaging, clever, but a bit disorganized   April 21, 2005
avoraciousreader (Somewhere in the Space Time Continuum)
6 out of 9 found this review helpful

Chieh Chieng's "A Long Stay in a Distant Land" is written with a structure reminiscent of Faye Myenne Ng's "Bone", jumping between acts or scenes scattered over many years, but it doesn't have the same narrative flow, the sense of inevitability as Ng's teller decides what more needs to be said at each point, peeling away layers of incident and family history, circling in on the central event of her sister's suicide. Though the chapters here are all related as part of the Lum family story, they are almost independent short stories, vignettes or even sidebars, without a similar central organizing question.

Formally, the main character is young Louis Lum, and the book revolves around two problems in the "now", 2002. Louis's mother Mirla recently died in an accident caused by a sleepy driver, whom his father Sonny is threatening to kill, so Louis moves in with Sonny to prevent his doing something foolish. Also, Sonny's brother Uncle Bo moved to Hong Kong years ago and married there, but after his wife died Bo, never a great communicator, dropped totally out of touch, refusing contact; halfway through the book, Louis volunteers to go to HK and look for Bo.

Scattered in among these threads, and at times overwhelming them, we are given snapshots of family history going back to the courting and marriage of Louis's's grandparents, Melvin Lum (long dead) and Esther, now the family matriarch. Melvin's decision, much to the dismay of his family and new bride, to enlist in the army in WWII not only forms a chapter, but is part of the family gestalt.

"Long Stay" is written with humor and a cast of quirky, quietly bizarre characters. Louis is convinced that a personalized Death is stalking his family, unleashing a string of unexpected deaths (listed on page 20) as revenge for the "steel rain of death" Melvin himself had unleashed during the war. Sonny is an ardent fan of gangsta rap, and a man of "unclear livelihood."

The writing is fun, but overly clever and self-conscious, striving too hard for effect. E.g., "That night, Louis dreamed of Jesus in the corporeal form of Max von Sydow standing in one corner of a boxing ring. ... The Son of Man unleashed a spin kick that landed square on the left side of Death's face...." It's a little too obvious that Chieng "graduated from a creative writing program" (UC Irvine) as the bio says.

Still, in all, it's an excellent freshman effort, and Chieng is an author worth watching.



5 out of 5 stars A Long Stay in Orange County, California   August 9, 2005
Debbie Lee Wesselmann (the Lehigh Valley, PA)
6 out of 6 found this review helpful

In this fine debut novel, Chieh Chieng explores the off-beat characters of a Chinese-American family through three generations living in Orange County, California. Louis Lum is a recent college graduate working as an underpaid fact-checker at a hot rod magazine, not the kind of position his mother Mirla had hoped for him. Louis once reveled in rebelling against his mother; however, Mirla has recently died in a car accident, brought on when an overworked medical student, Hersey Collins, fell asleep behind the wheel, and Louis feels guilty at having disappointed her. Louis's father Sonny calls Louis every night and threatens to murder Hersey to avenge Mirla's death. Because Louis does not know how serious his father is about his intentions, he moves in and stays up late with his father, listening to his father's rap records, keeping him from stabbing Hersey, and trying to figure him out. Meanwhile Louis's feisty grandmother Esther is worried about her youngest son Bo, who moved to Hong Kong years ago and who recently has severed all communication with her. Eventually, Esther convinces Louis to travel to Hong Kong to track down Bo to see if he is really "alive and in good health" while Esther watches over Sonny to make sure he doesn't follow through on his threats.

The narrative weaves multiple points-of-view throughout the generations to give a full portrait of this quirky family. The Lums are an eccentric, unintentionally hilarious lot, caught up more in their American life than in their Chinese ancestry. After all, Sonny is more adamant about blacks respecting their culture by listening to gangsta rap than he is about the truths and myths about his own. Louis speaks Cantonese so badly that, for his whole life, he has been unintentionally calling his father "Old Bean" instead of "Old Man." Esther makes the worst turnip cakes ever cooked, botching the traditional recipe so badly that everyone ends up with stomach aches. The story leaps backward and forward in time, from character to character, in a collage that coalesces around Louis, the youngest surviving member of a family prone to premature deaths.

Chieh Chieng brings all this together with a dry wit and an eye for the absurd. The understated humor never demeans his characters and instead makes them more lovable. The result is an entertaining, heartfelt book about one family's oddities and how those quirks come to define them.



3 out of 5 stars For plot synopsis, read another review   November 5, 2005
Gay D. F. Kelly (Austin, TX United States)
3 out of 7 found this review helpful

If you are used to reading Tan and Jen, Chieng will seem short on character development and heavy on symbolism. (The Grand Inquisitor came immediately to mind during a character's dream about a boxing match between Death and Jesus.) The theme here is fear of death, and, hence, fear of living, a rather heavy load for a short novel which has so many story lines treated in such cursory fashion. I feel as if I've just finished reading a collection of sound bites.

More than one reviewer has used the term "quirky" to describe the characters. I think the reviewers must lead extremely sheltered or unimaginative lives: A conversation with almost anyone will yield "quirks" no more bizarre than those found here. The interesting thing is not the novelty of idiosyncrasy, but the motivation. Chieng gives us the quick chuckle of the former, but not the satisfaction of latter. Too bad: His prose is competent and clean. I just wish there were more of it.



5 out of 5 stars Full of complex relationships but easy and entertaining read   September 29, 2005
Reader from New York (Tarrytown, NY)
2 out of 3 found this review helpful

I enjoyed this book immensely. I bought it because it was recommended in the NY Times book review and am glad I did. Mr. Chieng's characters are complicated but presented simply. His novel has both tragedy and comedy. I am always fascinated by chinese/american culture and this book made me realize how similar the immigrant experience is no matter where one comes from originally.




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