Editor Viet Nguyen’s Sympathizer wins Pulitzer, SUBSCRIBE & get free copy

Every 25th subscriber to diaCRITICS, starting now, gets a free signed copy of The Sympathizer, dedicated in whatever manner they want (within reason!). Here’s what editor Viet Thanh Nguyen had to say on winning the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for The Sympathizer.

I got the news at around 3:15 PM thanks to my Twitter and Facebook feed. I sat around shocked, stunned, fielding phone calls from my publicist and doing news interviews and trying to reply to as many emails, tweets, and Facebook comments and messages as I could. I called my wonderful partner, Lan Duong. I felt queasy and struck by literary lightning. I went to do a book talk at Harvard Bookstore and was so pleased to have a conversation with so many people. I just want to say to all of you who are reading this what I’ve tried to say to the press. Of course it’s wonderful for me to get this prize. But within minutes of getting it, I knew that I owed tremendous thanks to everyone who has gone before me in the great, ongoing struggle for social justice, for peace, for genuine equality, for representation for all at every level of every society. I think of the enormous debts I owe to everyone who fought for civil rights, for radical power, for economic equity, and how all these issues are inseparable from justice in the literary world. No minority writer, no writer of color, can claim that he or she accomplished anything purely on their own merit. We all owe so much to the collective struggles and activists that preceded us, that laid the foundations for our individual achievement, to everyone lucky enough to be remembered and so many who have been forgotten. Great love to Asian American Studies, to Ethnic Studies, to UC Berkeley, my alma mater that made me into the person that I am, to all who fight the good fight and who will never, ever believe that they are only individuals. All your messages to me registering the pride you feel in my accomplishment as a friend, as a fellow scholar or writer, as an Asian American/ist, as a Vietnamese or Vietnamese American–all of this affirms to me that we who wish to be are part of a movement, of movements, for love, peace, justice, and not least of all great literature.

See Viet’s website and his publisher’s website for more info.

 

14 COMMENTS

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  2. KQED ‘s interview with you was a fascinating rarity – people from Asia or Africa don’t usually speak about the US as candidly as you do. I have read a bit about Vietnam – from Graham Greene downwards and have longed for a Vietnamese-written book in English and now I have learned of one!

    Thank you.

    Siddhartha Banerjee
    Oxford, Pennsylvania

  3. Such a fantastic Fresh Air interview. I grew up just outside Fort Indiantown Gap in Hershey. I also traveled to Buon Ma Thuot several years ago – and recently moved to San Jose. Your story is compelling.

  4. Congrats Mr. Nguyen! What a beautiful and humble dedication to those who came before you. I am so moved by your book. Kudos to KPFK radio for their interview of you before you won the Pulitzer. I hope you speak in the San Gabriel Valley soon so we can hear you! Very best to you and your family.

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