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Anam

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A grandson tries to learn the family story. But what kind of story is it? Is it a prison memoir, about the grandfather imprisoned without charge or trial by a revolutionary government? Is it an oral history of the grandmother left behind to look after the children? Or is it a love story? A detective tale?
Moving from 1930s Hanoi through a series of never-ending wars and displacements to Saigon, Paris, Melbourne and Cambridge, Anam is a novel about memory and inheritance, colonialism and belonging, home and exile.
Anam blends fiction and essay, theory and everyday life to imagine that which has been repressed, left out, and forgotten. The grandson mines his family and personal stories to turn over ideas that resonate with all of us around place and home, legacy and expectation, ambition and sacrifice. As he sifts through letters, photographs, government documents and memories, he has his own family to think about: a partner and an infant daughter. Is there a way to remember the past that creates a future for them? Or does coming home always involve a certain amount of forgetting?
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    • Books+Publishing

      April 4, 2023
      Winner of the 2021 Victorian Premier’s Literary Award for an Unpublished Manuscript, Anam is a remarkable debut novel exploring memory, family, colonialism and displacement. The narrator, a young Vietnamese-Australian man who has recently become a father, sifts through family letters, photographs and stories of war, sacrifice and migration in an attempt to understand—and retell—his grandparents’ history. A work of autofiction, the novel hinges on the narrator’s career as a former human rights lawyer now turned scholar, perhaps influenced by author André Dao’s work documenting stories of asylum seekers in Australia. This is one way Dao skilfully braids fiction, theory and history to connect the past with the present. At once an absorbing and tender family saga and a philosophical meditation on memory and the ethics of retelling intergenerational histories, Anam is written in short, fragmented chapters that effortlessly move through time and place—from 1930s Hanoi to Saigon, Paris, Melbourne and Cambridge. The history that the narrator is trying to retrace is one of war and tragedy that cannot be told in a linear fashion, nor without reflections, doubt and ghosts, and so Dao offers the reader one piece of the story at a time. In doing so, he explores memory and remembering not only as an inheritance, but also as a way of creating a future. Anam is an epic feat that showcases Dao’s talent for storytelling, and will appeal to fans of Ocean Vuong, Nam Le and Madeleine Thien.

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  • English

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