Living in a back-alley room, a man and a woman are hiding from a dangerous past. Clifford Wilkes is the last American deserter left in Saigon; Lanh is a woman slowly recovering from a bitter life of... This description may be from another edition of this product.
I usually don't gush over books like this but The Alleys of Eden has to be one of the best novels I've enjoyed this year. It's a quick read but it's also beautifully written. From the back streets of Saigon to San Francisco, Butler captures what 1975 felt like exactly. I wasn't expecting much from it (being a first novel and all) but I'm going to go back right now and read it again.
Can wartime love survive in "peacetime" across continents?
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
"The Alleys of Eden" was first published in the early 1980's. Its revival is due to the later works of Robert Olen Butler, including the 1993 Pulitzer Prize winner, "A Good Scent from a Faraway Mountain." Few writers have delved into the psychological lives of Vietnam vets as Butler has. This novel tests the love between an American deserter in Vietnam and a Vietnamese woman, who are bonded by the extremities of the war. When the couple try to start over in America, they are faced with a different set of challenges. This novel is remiscent of Le Ly Hayslip's autobiographies, "When Heaven and Earth Change Places," and "Child of War: Woman of Peace." The irony is that it took more than a decade for Butler's refreshing novel to surface, and that is largely due to the efforts of the Vietnam vets' struggles to be heard and the public's recent interent in literature related to Vietnam.
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