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The Barbarians are Coming
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

The Barbarians are Coming Paperback - 2001

by Louie, David Wong

  • Used
  • Signed
  • first

In a tale that alternates between black comedy and out-and-out slapstick, David Wong Louie explores the painful alienation between a Chinese-American man and his immigrant father--a conflict that is deepened by the son's decision to become a chef instead of a doctor.

Description

Berkley. Collectible - Very Good. Signed Copy First edition copy. Collectible - Very Good. Signed by author on title page.
Used - Collectible - Very Good
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Details

  • Title The Barbarians are Coming
  • Author Louie, David Wong
  • Binding Paperback
  • Edition First Printing
  • Condition Used - Collectible - Very Good
  • Pages 384
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Berkley, E Rutherford, New Jersey, U.S.A.
  • Date 2001-03-01
  • Bookseller's Inventory # SB00Z-01203
  • ISBN 9780425178287 / 0425178285
  • Weight 1.04 lbs (0.47 kg)
  • Dimensions 8.25 x 5.5 x 0.86 in (20.96 x 13.97 x 2.18 cm)
  • Themes
    • Ethnic Orientation: Asian - Chinese
  • Dewey Decimal Code FIC

About Wonder Book Maryland, United States

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With 3 stores less than 1 hour outside the DC/Metropolitan area (1 in Gaithersburg, 1 in Frederick and 1 in Hagerstown, MD), we have the largest selection of books in the tri-state area. Wonder Book and Video has been in business since 1980 and online since 1997. We have over 1 Million books for sale on our website and another 1 Million books for sale in our 3 locations. We have a very active online inventory and as such, we can receive multiple orders for the same item. We fill those orders on a first come first serve basis, but will refund promptly any items that are out of stock. Since 1980 it has always been about the books. ALL kinds of books from 95 cent children\'s paperbacks to five figure rare and collectibles. A merging of the old and new is where we started, and it is where we are today. Our retail stores have always been places where a reader can rush in looking for a title needed for a term paper that is due the next day, or where bibliophiles can get lost \"in the stacks\" for as long as they wish. In 2002 USAToday recognized us as \"1 of 10 Great Old Bookstores\", and we have been featured in numerous other newspaper and TV stories including Washington Post and CSpan.

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Summary

Winner of the 2000 Book Award in Prose from the Association for American Studies and the Lannan Foundation Literary Award for 2002!

The award-winning author of Pangs of Love triumphs with "a work that manages to be consistently funny, infinitely sad, and surprisingly exhilarating... truly memorable." (Newsday)

From the publisher

David Wong Louie is the author of Pangs of Love, winner of the Los Angeles Times First Fiction Award and the Ploughshares First Book Award. He lives in Venice, California, and teaches at UCLA.

Categories

Media reviews

“If The Barbarians Are Coming weren’t so funny, it would kill you.”—Boston Sunday Globe

“An ambitious and appealing first novel, brilliant in its scathing insights…It is 1978, and 26-year-old Sterling, the bright American-born son of Chinese parents, has already disappointed his parents by choosing the Culinary Institute of America rather than medical school, and he’s about to disappoint everyone else as well. His casual girlfriend Bliss wants more from their relationship; his parents want him to marry the Chinese picture-bride they have chosen for him; and his employers, the Waspy women of the Richfield Ladies’ Club, want him to cook Chinese food, though his specialty is French cuisine…At the heart of Sterling’s failings is his troubled and distant relationship with his ailing father, Genius, who is devoted to the Chinese laundry he runs. Louie dazzlingly captures the bitter ironies of Asian-American life, but it is the scenes between father and son and, eventually, the scenes between Sterling and his sons, that expose the most complex realities of Chinese-American identity.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“Louie ranks with the best of a new generation of American novelists. And when it comes to Asian-American themes, he’s as funny as Gish Jen [and] as eloquent as Chang-rae Lee…His first novel is truly memorable.”—Newsday

“A story about cooking and loving, often as sensual as Laura Esquivel’s Like Water for Chocolate, but also as bitingly funny as Nick Hornby’s High Fidelity…an intoxicating, heady trip, a feast of a novel.”—Seattle Weekly

“One of the most moving father-son stories in decades…a knowing, witty take on the immigrant experience.”—*Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

The Barbarians Are Coming begins in farce, proceeds to elusively edgy, laugh-so-you-don’t-cry comedy and concludes in heart-wrenching drama. Though a first-time novelist, Louie has directed it all with a master’s deft hand…Sterling is a brightly lit figure, part aspiring Horatio Alger, part pathetic Woody Allen, part creative James Beard.”—Newsday

“This is humor in the Swiftian sense: piercing and satirical and delivering something far larger than comedy for its own sake…David Wong Louie’s story [is] as generously, utterly, American as it is eloquently precise.”—Boston Sunday Globe

“A novel of wit, insight, and power.”—Elle

“Sterling’s interactions with his primarily Chinese-speaking parents, Genius and Zsa Zsa, are often hilarious.”—Book

“Full of astonishing writing.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“Taut, witty prose.”—Seattle Weekly

“David Wong Louie whips up a kind of reverse feast in his masterful first novel, The Barbarians Are Coming, beginning with a frothy comic dessert and egging us on to the main course, a heartbreaking tragedy about fathers and sons, dashed hopes and missed opportunities for love…a mature, richly characterized family saga whose universal themes take it far beyond the category of ethnic fiction.”—San Francisco Chronicle Book Review

“As grandly comic as an American carnival and as tragic as any Chinese opera.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

About the author

David Wong Louie is the author of Pangs of Love, winner of the Los Angeles Times First Fiction Award and the Ploughshares First Book Award. He lives in Venice, California, and teaches at UCLA.