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Daughters of the New Year

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A MARIE CLAIRE BOOK CLUB PICK
A Recommended Read from: Salon * Good Morning America * People Magazine * Electric Lit * Goodreads * Buzzfeed * The Seattle Times * Deep South Magazine * Book Culture * Debutiful
"A daring debut." —New York Times Book Review

A lively, spellbinding tale about the extraordinary women within a Vietnamese immigrant familyand the ancient zodiac legend that binds them together
What does the future hold for those born in the years of the Dragon, Tiger, and Goat?
In present day New Orleans, Xuan Trung, former beauty queen turned refugee after the Fall of Saigon, is obsessed with divining her daughters' fates through their Vietnamese zodiac signs. But Trac, Nhi and Trieu diverge completely from their immigrant parents' expectations. Successful lawyer Trac hides her sexuality from her family; Nhi competes as the only woman of color on a Bachelor-esque reality TV show; and Trieu, a budding writer, is determined to learn more about her familial and cultural past.
As the three sisters begin to encounter strange glimpses of long-buried secrets from the ancestors they never knew, the story of the Trung women unfurls to reveal the dramatic events that brought them to America. Moving backwards in time, E.M. Tran takes us into the high school classrooms of New Orleans, to Saigon beauty pageants, to twentieth century rubber plantations, traversing a century as the Trungs are both estranged and united by the ghosts of their tumultuous history.
A "haunted story of resilience and survival" (Meng Jin, Little Gods), Daughters of the New Year is an addictive, high-wire act of storytelling that illuminates an entire lineage of extraordinary women fighting to reclaim the power they've been stripped of for centuries.
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    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2022

      Former beauty queen Xuan Trung, a refugee from Vietnam living in New Orleans, seeks to shape her daughters' lives via Vietnamese zodiac signs. But these young women have ideas of their own. Nhi cheerfully competes as the one woman of color on a Bachelor-styled TV show, lawyer Trac shoves her sexuality behind a curtain when her family is around, and aspiring writer Trieu wants to learn more about her family history. A debut with a 150,000-copy first printing.

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 22, 2022
      Tran debuts with a complex story involving many generations of a Vietnamese family’s women and their resilience. Xuan flees the fall of Saigon in 1975 for the U.S. with her mother and sister, losing her home, family wealth, and social standing. In the years after, she has three daughters and charts the family’s future with a complex zodiac almanac, as the trauma of dislocation and war manifests in her being ever ready for disaster. Now, in 2016, Trac, the eldest, is a successful lawyer, refusing to submit to her father’s plans and hiding her sexuality from her parents. Aspiring actress Nhi, the middle sister, wanders off the set of a reality show in Saigon and disappears. Trieu, the youngest, hopes to live up to her mother’s expectations by becoming a writer. Later, Xuan reveals how she and her mother managed to escape Saigon, and that tragic story sheds light on the difficulties faced by the three daughters. Tran further complicates the legacy with stories of the women’s ancestors who resisted third-century Chinese occupation and 19th-century French imperialism. Though the many threads can be hard to follow, and Tran’s decision to abandon Xuan’s daughters’ story lines will frustrate readers, she does an excellent job at conveying the cyclical nature of family and political history. Though a bit unwieldy, there are plenty of powerful moments. Agent: Eloy Bleifuss, Janklow & Nesbit Assoc.

    • Booklist

      September 1, 2022
      Falling backward through time, Tran's debut follows the women of the Trung family in New Orleans and Vietnam. At Lunar New Year, Xuan reads her three daughters' horoscopes in order to warn them of the risks particular to their zodiac signs in the coming year. Growing up, Trac, Nhi, and Trieu feel both too Americanized for the Vietnamese community, and not American enough for the white community. The gulf between Xuan and her daughters is further exacerbated by language barriers and unspoken family history. The daughters' relationships to their now-divorced parents is shaped by guilt and obligation. After introducing the Trung daughters as adults, the narrative traces back to Xuan's youth in Saigon as she enters a beauty pageant. Her mother, Ti�n, plans for her family's escape as the U.S. military is pulling out of South Vietnam. Ti�n's mother's and grandmother's chapters give additional depth to the Trungs' lost family history. Layered with magical realism, Tran's novel is a complex meditation on history, memory, and what each generation carries.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: With a large print run and comparisons to Yaa Gyasi's Homegoing (2016) and Chloe Benjamin's The Immortalists (2018), expect lots of curiosity about (and demand for) this debut.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      September 1, 2022

      DEBUT Tran's first novel opens in 2016 New Orleans with matriarchal divorcee Xuan Trung making sure to give horoscopes for the coming lunar new year, based on the Vietnamese zodiac, to each of her three adult daughters: corporate lawyer Trac, aspiring actress Nhi, and Trieu, the youngest, an aspiring writer who works in a gym. Starting off as a single story about a contemporary Vietnamese American family, the narrative gradually unfolds to reveal a beautifully told multigenerational tale tracing the family's history and genealogy back to the French-owned rubber plantations of Vietnam. Tran writes fluidly as she introduces each character, loosely stringing together their stories with the revelation and meaning of their lunar zodiac signs; identifiable tales of prejudice and strife are unraveled among various ages, genders, and cultures throughout. VERDICT It's disappointing that Xuan and her daughters are not revisited once the narrative returns to the past, but Tran's debut is an engrossing story of the ties among mothers, daughters, and sisters, sprinkled with humor and intrigue. Fans of the strong women protagonists of Min Jin Lee's Pachinko or Nguyen Phan Que Mai's The Mountains Sing will likely appreciate this less intensively told family story. Also good for book groups.--Shirley Quan

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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