(Penguin Press)
Ocean Vuong‘s 2019 debut novel, On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous, was one of those novels that made me silently pledge, “I’ll follow you anywhere, whatever you write.” And, so I have into Vuong’s 2022 poetry collection, Time Is a Mother, and, now, his second novel.
The Emperor of Gladness, like its predecessor, explores what Vuong has called in a recent interview, “the loneliness of class movement.” Sprawling where its predecessor was compact, The Emperor of Gladness opens on a view — sweeping in time and space — of East Gladness, Conn., a town that manufacturing left behind. Our tour guides are the spirits of the place, who speak to us in a collective voice:
Follow the [train] tracks till they fork off and sink into a path of trampled weeds leading to a junkyard packed with school buses in various stages of amnesia … Furred with ivy, their dented hoods pooled with crisp leaves, they are relics of our mislearning.
If the novel’s opening calls to mind Thornton Wilder glazed with Bruce Springsteen, what happens next reads like Vuong’s nod to Frank Capra and his classic 1946 film, It’s a Wonderful Life.
Our main character, a 19-year-old depressed Vietnamese American boy named Hai, stands on the town bridge. Hai has lied to his immigrant mother: She knows he’s dropped out of college, but in an effort to make her feel better, Hai claims he’s been accepted to med school, which she naively believes. Her joy fills him with self-loathing.