The Colors of April

Quan Manh Ha editor Cab Tran editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Three Rooms Press

Publishing:1st Apr '25

£14.99

This title is due to be published on 1st April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

The Colors of April cover

Fifty years after the end of the Vietnam War, literary voices of the Vietnamese-American diaspora as well as Vietnam-based authors speak to the experience of those who left and those who stayed in THE COLORS OF APRIL, a collection of new short fiction curated by award-winning translators and editors Quan Manh Ha and Cab Tran.

For much of the twentieth century, Vietnam played an outsized role on the global stage, charting the destinies of superpowers and reshaping the world’s politics. Now fifty years after the end of the Vietnam War comes an anthology of fiction that finally speaks to the global Vietnamese experience: voices of both those who left and those who stayed, what was gained and lost in the half century since, and—for the generations that followed—what it means to be Vietnamese.

More than two dozen distinct literary voices are featured in this collection, including Viet Thanh Nguyen (Pulitzer Prize winner, The Sympathizer), Andrew Lam (PEN/Beyond Margins Award winner, Perfume Dreams), Barbara Tran (Lannan Foundation Award winner, In the Mynah Bird's Own Words), Vu Tran (Whiting Award winner, Dragonfish) and many more.

The stories are as diverse in style, tone, and subject matter as the ancestral lands of the Vietnamese people. From the rubble of the Ancient Citadel in Quảng Trị to the makeshift orphanages outside Sài Gòn, from Palo Alto to a tony Lincoln Park apartment in Chicago, the narratives straddle continents and generations, the political as well as the personal. But what they share is much greater than their differences. They speak to a common language, to a culture steeped in history and myth and storytelling that vividly captures the enduring spirit of the Vietnamese people.

Editor Quan Manh Ha is Professor of English at the University of Montana and the co-translator of Other Moons: Vietnamese Short Stories of the American War and Its Aftermath, among other titles. Co-editor Cab Tran holds an MFA from University of Michigan’s Helen Zell Writers’ Program. His fiction and nonfiction have appeared in Vagabond: Bulgaria’s English Monthly, Black Warrior Review, The Iconoclast, and elsewhere. He teaches fiction for Gotham Writers Workshop. In 2023, Ha and Tran co-translated and co-edited Bảo Ninh’s Hà Nội at Midnight.

Complete list of contributors in alphabetical order: BẢO Thương, Thuy DINH,...

"It took 50 years after the end of the Vietnam War for a book that brings together the perspectives of Vietnamese writers, regardless of their political affiliations or citizenship status, to be published. A significant milestone in itself." —Isabelle Thuy Pelaud, author, this is all i choose to tell: History and Hybridity in Vietnamese American Literature; Executive Director, Diasporic Vietnamese Artists Network (DVAN)

“Quan Manh Ha and Cab Tran have assembled a wide-ranging collection that shows the depth and richness of post-Vietnam War literature from around the globe. The Colors of April is an important anthology that acts as a bridge between two sides and, ultimately, the past and present. This will be the book I reach for when someone asks about the Vietnam War.” —Eric Nguyen, author, Things We Lost to the Water

The Colors of April puts a human face on the experiences and consequences of war as viewed from the Vietnamese perspective. To be a fully informed citizen, this book, is, in a word, essential reading.” —Donald Anderson, editor, War, Literature & the Arts; author, Fragments of a Mortal Mind

“The stories in The Colors of April span generations—from the perspectives of native-born Vietnamese survivors to narratives from the contemporary diaspora—forming a powerful collage that bears witness and wraps the reader in the multiple realities of the Vietnam War.” —Micah Fields, author, We Hold Our Breath; Marine Corps combat veteran

ISBN: 9781953103574

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

386 pages