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On Such a Full Sea by Chang-rae Lee
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On Such a Full Sea

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On Such a Full Sea by Chang-rae Lee
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Jan 07, 2014 | ISBN 9780698136052 | 665 Minutes

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  • Jan 07, 2014 | ISBN 9781101632147

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  • Jan 07, 2014 | ISBN 9780698136052

    665 Minutes

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Praise

“Watching a talented writer take a risk is one of the pleasures of devoted reading, and On Such a Full Sea provides all that and more. . . . Lee has always been preoccupied by the themes of hope and betrayal, by the tensions that arise in small lives in the midst of great social change. His marvelous new book, which imagines a future after the breakdown of our own society takes on those concerns with his customary mastery of quiet detail—and a touch of the fantastic. . . . With On Such a Full Sea, he has found a new way to explore his old preoccupation: the oft-told tale of the desperate, betraying, lonely human heart.”—Andrew Sean Greer, The New York Times Book Review

“I’ve never been a fan of grand hyperbolic declarations in book reviews, but faced with On Such a Full Sea, I have no choice but to ask: Who is a greater novelist than Chang-rae Lee today?”—Porochista Khakpour, The Los Angeles Times

“In his latest and boldest novel, On Such a Full Sea, Lee’s characters are Chinese immigrant workers in the United States—specifically Chinese workers from a long-elapsed China toiling in a fast-declining America a century or so from now. For Lee’s heroine, Fan, the issue is not acclimatization but self-discovery. The adventures of this feisty yet wary protagonist, together with a bleak but arresting vision of the future, keep the reader rapt and concerned for the fate of both beleaguered character and battered brave new world.”—Minneapolis Star Tribune

“Now with On Such a Full Sea, one of our most silken storytellers, Chang-rae Lee, has imagined how it all goes wrong in the darkest installment of this literary night terror yet. The menace of Lee’s book derives from how closely it resembles reality. The haves and have-nots in his world are neatly balkanized. Cities produce, suburbs consume, and only the rich can afford the health care that keeps them alive. . . . With this strange and magically grim book, Chang-rae Lee has allowed us to leave the familiar behind, all so we can see it more clearly.”—The Boston Globe

“[On Such a Full Sea is] not just a fully realized, time-jumping narrative of an audacious young girl in search of lost loved ones, but an exploration of the meaning and function of narrative, of illusion and delusion, of engineered personalities and faint promises of personhood, and of one powerful nation’s disappearance and how that indelibly affects another.”—Chicago Tribune

“The most striking dystopian novels sound an alarm, focus our attention and even change the language. The Handmaid’s Tale crystallized our fears about reproductive control; Fahrenheit 451 still flames discussions of censorship; and 1984 is the lens through which we watch the Obama administration watching us. Chang-rae Lee’s unsettling new novel, On Such a Full Sea, arrives from that same frightening realm of total oversight and pinched individuality. . . . A brilliant, deeply unnerving portrait.”—The Washington Post

“Should every talented novelist have a go at dystopia? Probably not, but we can thank the gods of chaos that the trendy genre fell into the hands of Chang-rae Lee. Over four novels, Lee has mastered the art of lyrical realist portraiture, breathing life into immigrants at sea in modern America. Taking a bold turn with his fifth, On Such a Full Sea, he’s equally deft at envisioning a failed America. . . . As Fan’s wild journey takes her across the socioeconomic strata, Lee’s novel brilliantly satisfies the genre’s prime directive, which is to reveal the awful present by means of the terrible future.”—GQ

“[The] haunting On Such a Full Sea . . . recalls the work of Cormac McCarthy and Kazuo Ishiguro. Here Lee weaves multiple plots into an ambitious epic showcasing a fearless fish-tank-diver heroine as she treks across a devastated landscape. . . . With its appealing protagonist as narrative glue, On Such a Full Sea layers stories within stories, building to its final, resonant catharsis.”—O, The Oprah Magazine

“Chang-rae Lee . . . is best known for realistic fiction about displaced characters of Asian descent. He sets his latest work, On Such a Full Sea, in a chaotic, dystopian America, but I’m happy to report that at its heart it’s still very much another deeply soulful Chang-rae Lee novel. . . . The dystopia of On Such a Full Sea isn’t showy. As in Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go, there’s a welcome absence of sterile white laboratories and grand displays of oppression. instead Lee relies on specific, indelible images—a family of toothless acrobats who feed humans to their dogs, a group of anime-eyed girls held captive in a wealthy Charter woman’s home—and his usual perceptive writing to get at the warped morality that can drive a world into decline.”—Entertainment Weekly

“Chang-rae Lee’s On Such A Full Sea is so elegiac that it almost collapses into a morass of sorrow, yet it’s so well crafted it’s impossible not to see the story to its end. With his latest novel, Lee creates a world far into the future, where the boundaries between countries have frayed and a semi-dystopian state has arisen. Although Orwellian themes linger in the background, the book itself is really about one woman, and the symbol she becomes to the village she leaves behind.”—A.V. Club (A)

“[A] moving new novel.”—Vanity Fair

“[A] riveting story . . . Lee’s brilliantly rendered dystopia resembles our America.”—More

“Lee’s prose is sumptuous and at dimes discursive, and for that reason, this is a novel that demands the reader’s full engagement. The rewards for that commitment are considerable; On Such a Full Sea is an elegiac and often unsettling glimpse of a future that could be closer than we’d like to think.”—Bookpage

“It’s an engrossing read, and Lee’s skills as a world builder of the finest order are evident in every chapter.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“Lee, always entrancing and delving, takes a truly radical leap in this wrenching yet poetic, philosophical, even mystical speculative odyssey. . . . Lee brilliantly and wisely dramatizes class stratification and social disintegration, deprivation and sustenance both physical and psychic, reflecting, with rare acuity, on the evolution of legends and how, in the most hellish of circumstances, we rediscover the solace of art. Electrifying.”—Booklist (starred review)
 
“The title alone is an astonishing feat of encapsulated genius from the inimitable Lee. . . . Brilliant . . . A heart-thumping adventure.”—Library Journal (starred review)

“A harrowing and fully imagined vision of dystopian America from Lee. . . . The potency and strangeness of [his]characters never diminish the sense that Lee has written an allegory of our current predicaments, and the narration, written in the collective voice of B-Mor, gives the novel the tone of a timeless and cautionary fable. Welcome and surprising proof that there’s plenty of life in end-of-the-world storytelling.”—Kirkus (starred review)

Awards

ALA Notable Book SELECTION 2014

Amazon Best of the Year SELECTION 2014

Author Essay

Isn’t All Immigrant Fiction Essentially Dystopian Fiction?

An essay by Chang-rae Lee
 

I wasn’t intent on creating a “dystopian” tale while I was writing On Such a Full Sea. This might seem hard to believe, given the society I describe in the novel: a future world beset by environmental contamination and rigidly partitioned by class, where the ultra-rich live in securely gated “villages,” workers spend their entire lives in cloistered production settlements, and the citizens of the wild and unregulated “open counties” that surround them are left to survive wholly on their own. Certainly when I was young I was an admirer of such classic novels of dystopia as 1984 and Fahrenheit 451, but, in fact, in writing this book I didn’t want any models of the genre to guide me. I was simply working the way I have always worked, which is to imagine characters who find themselves at a pivotal moment in their lives, characters who are questioning their place in their families and communities and, in turn, those communities’ place in the wider world. In this regard, I consider On Such a Full Sea to be more of an extension of my previous novels than any radical departure. This is particularly true if one considers the so-called immigrant narratives of my earlier novels, which I’ve always felt were essentially dystopian in nature; for what does such a fiction describe if not a world in which the beliefs and practices are unfamiliar and sometimes backward, in which the morality is skewed, and whose every civil contour feels wrong, if only to its newly arrived hero, who must venture into and negotiate his way through a brave new world. In a dystopian fiction, we, the readers, are enlisted to experience this “adventure”; we are the new arrivals on the scene of a seemingly bizarre civilization, which of course has closer—and thus more unsettling—correspondences to our own than we ever anticipated. This is how I conceived of On Such a Full Sea. The true aim was not simply to do the “world-building” of some speculated future, to fit it out with aptly designed infrastructure and laws and costumery, but to explore what happens to people in certain intensified contexts, to trace and examine how they are formed and deformed by those contexts, and how they might ultimately “re-form” themselves in the face of such pressures.

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