By focusing on her mother Nhã Tiên’s experience during the anti-French resistance, the exodus of 1954, and other jolting events that lead up to the fall of Saigon in 1975, Nguyen-Utgaard sheds welcome light on the hardships that the women of Vietnam in particular had to bear while ensuring the survival of their families. The aftermath of war and the inter-generational trauma that permeates the lives of the survivors is also a recurrent and powerfully evoked theme. Nguyen-Utgaard calls herself and the other children of war “emotionally starved,” for her entire generation has grown up in dysfunctional families, carrying the wounds of an unstable childhood and absent parents.
Sweeping over decades yet deftly centering telling details and the extraordinary resilience of subjects who come alive as individuals on the page, Against the Wild Wind bursts with life in spite of its dark subject matter. Nguyen-Utgaard celebrates the countryside and villages and “orderly-divided rice fields,” the Hanoi Grand Theatre, the Saigon river, and her mother’s “enchanting” reminiscences of village life, including an essay her mother wrote, as a young student, that touchingly touts the many uses of bamboo. The author’s “yearning for her mother” and her mother’s “yearning for Vietnam” bind the themes of mother and motherland, resulting in a memorable, powerful read.
Takeaway: The powerfully told memoir of a daughter, her mother, and war-torn Vietnam.
Great for fans of: Nguyễn Phan Quế Mai, Binh Tu Tran’s The Red Earth.
Production grades
Cover: A
Design and typography: A-
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A-