Bliss montage

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Publisher
Varies, see individual formats and editions
Publication Date
2022.
Language
English

Description

A National Indie BestsellerWinner of the National Book Critics Circle Award, the Story Prize, and a Windham-Campbell Literature PrizeA Best Book of the Year at The New York Times, The New Yorker, Vogue, Houston Chronicle, Roxane Gay’s The Audacity, Mashable, Polygon, Kirkus Reviews, and Library JournalA New York Times Book Review Editor’s Choice“Uncanny and haunting . . . Genius.” —Michele Filgate, The Washington Post“Dazzling.” —Maureen Corrigan, NPR’s Fresh AirWhat happens when fantasy tears the screen of the everyday to wake us up? Could that waking be our end?In Bliss Montage, Ling Ma brings us eight wildly different tales of people making their way through the madness and reality of our collective delusions: love and loneliness, connection and possession, friendship, motherhood, the idea of home. A woman lives in a house with all her ex-boyfriends. A toxic friendship grows up around a drug that makes you invisible. An ancient ritual might heal you of anything—if you bury yourself alive. These and other scenarios investigate the ways that the outlandish and the ordinary are shockingly, deceptively, heartbreakingly alike.

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Contributors
Chin, Katharine Narrator
Ma, Ling Author
ISBN
9780374293512
9780374717124
9781250875938

Table of Contents

From the Book - First edition.

Los Angeles --
Oranges --
G --
Yeti lovemaking --
Returning --
Office hours --
Peking duck --
Tomorrow.

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Author Notes

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These books have the appeal factors haunting, stylistically complex, and nonlinear, and they have the theme "immigrant experiences"; the subjects "immigrants," "east asian people," and "north american people"; and include the identity "asian."
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These books have the appeal factors haunting and lyrical, and they have the genre "short stories"; the subjects "chinese americans," "asian americans," and "interpersonal relations"; and include the identity "asian."
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The stylistically complex stories in these collections are set in a dreamlike America that is hauntingly both new and old: Chinese American women encounter pandemics and ghosts (Bliss) and Mexican American women deal with climate change and, sabertooth tigers (Maria). -- Michael Shumate
Haunting and lyrically written, these own voices story collections place Asian American characters in odd situations, like ingesting drugs that make them invisible (Bliss Montage) or discovering a magical creature while doing laundry (Every Drop). -- Basia Wilson
These books have the theme "immigrant experiences"; the genres "literary fiction" and "short stories"; and the subjects "chinese americans," "asian americans," and "immigrants."
These books have the appeal factors haunting and stylistically complex, and they have the theme "immigrant experiences"; the genre "short stories"; the subjects "immigrants," "east asian people," and "north american people"; and include the identity "asian."
These books have the theme "immigrant experiences"; the subjects "chinese americans," "asian americans," and "immigrants"; and include the identity "asian."
These books have the appeal factors haunting, and they have the theme "immigrant experiences"; the subjects "chinese americans," "asian americans," and "immigrants"; and include the identity "asian."
Lyrical own voices short stories explore the lives of contemporary Asian and Asian American women in these collections, primarily Japanese in Let's Go and Chinese in Bliss Montage. -- Michael Shumate
Nothing is what it seems in these magical realism short story collections written by acclaimed authors. Both offer lyrical and witty writing. -- Kaitlin Conner

Similar Authors From NoveList

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These authors write strange, surreal, and character-driven books -- oftentimes with a fairytale-like quality (Oyeyemi) or apocalyptic settings (Ma). The otherworldliness of their narratives doesn't preclude space for familiar cultural themes, as the Chinese immigrant experience (Ma) and Black identity (Oyeyemi) feature strongly in some of their works. -- Basia Wilson
Both authors write witty and offbeat science fiction about characters who seek safety and a (possibly nonexistent) purpose at the end of the world. Ma's writing style is more surrealistic, whereas Adams writes absurdist fiction. -- CJ Connor
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These authors' works have the appeal factors haunting and stylistically complex, and they have the genre "literary fiction"; the subjects "american people," "east asian people," and "asian people"; include the identity "asian"; and characters that are "sympathetic characters."
These authors' works have the appeal factors haunting and lyrical, and they have the subjects "chinese americans," "east asian people," and "asian people"; include the identity "asian"; and characters that are "complex characters."
These authors' works have the appeal factors stylistically complex and unnamed narrator, and they have the subjects "asian people," "capitalism," and "immigrants"; and include the identity "southwest asian and north african (middle eastern)."
These authors' works have the appeal factors sardonic, stylistically complex, and unnamed narrator, and they have the genre "satire and parodies"; the subjects "children of immigrants," "east asian people," and "asian people"; and include the identity "asian."
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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Following her debut novel, Severance (2018), Ma again proves her biting sense of humor and gift for subtlety in a collection of eight short stories, all surreal and jarring in the most sensational way. A woman lives with her husband, who only speaks in dollar signs, and all of her ex-boyfriends in a giant Los Angeles house. Bea takes an invisibility-inducing drug called G with her childhood best friend, who is known to be untrustworthy but shares her experience of otherness. And in another story, a writer loses her spouse on a trip to his home country of Garboza. There, she discovers amid the panic that the Morning Festival they're heading to involves a tradition of literal burial and rebirth. Playful and melancholic, Ma masterfully takes on heavy topics such as abuse and loneliness with sprawling, spinning plotlines. All the while, she interweaves the experience of Chinese American women, touching on visibility, assimilation, and the expectations of immigrant mothers. A fantastical collection that grows more and more captivating with each page.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

Ma (Severance) examines themes of otherness and disconnection in this fantastical and often brilliant collection. In "Tomorrow," an arm protrudes from a woman's vagina during her pregnancy, which her doctor says is "not ideal" but "relatively safe," his cursory advice gleaned from a website that "looks like WebMD." The mother, like many of the book's protagonists, emigrated from China to the U.S. as a child; later in the story, she returns to visit her great-aunt, with whom she communicates primarily through a translation app. In "Returning," a woman travels with her husband to his native country, the fictional Garboza, only to be abandoned by him at the airport. The protagonist, who wrote a novel about a couple who "during an economic depression, decide to cryogenically freeze themselves," experiences ambivalence about her marriage. These stories, and the elliptical "Office Hours" (about a young woman's semi-romance with her film professor, who has a Narnia-like magical wardrobe in his office), are enchanting, full of intelligence, dry humor, and an appealing self-awareness. On the other hand, a couple of entries--such as "Los Angeles," about a woman living with 100 of her ex-boyfriends--don't quite manifest into something more than their conceit. Nevertheless, there is much to enjoy. Agent: Jin Auh, Wylie Agency. (Sept.)

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Library Journal Review

In six stories set mostly in central New York State, Natural History revisits the family of scientists, teachers, and innovators the expansive Barrett has featured regularly since her National Book Award-winning collection Ship Fever. From passengers quarantined while on cruise to a woman explaining to her barstool companion that she has ESP to a hyena loose in the south of France, I Walk Between the Raindrops shows off the award-winning Boyle's trenchant prose (50,000-copy first printing). In Bliss Montage, NYPL Young Lion Ma (Severance) reveals the absurdism of the everyday through push-the-envelope stories featuring a woman living with all her former boyfriends, relationships based on an invisibility drug, and the idea that burying oneself alive can cure all manner of ills (75,000-copy first printing). From prolific, icepick-exact short story writer Means, a Pushcart and O. Henry honoree, Two Nurses, Smoking explores grief and survival in pieces ranging from two nurses exchanging quiet support in a parking lot to a couple reuniting on the ski slopes after having met in a bereavement group.

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Kirkus Book Review

Short stories from the author of Severance, winner of the 2018 Kirkus Prize for fiction. The narrator of "Los Angeles" lives with her husband, their children, and the children's au pairs in the east and west wings of their home. Her hundred ex-boyfriends live in the "largest but ugliest wing." While the narrator takes these past lovers on outings to Moon Juice and LACMA, the husband works at an investment firm. The husband's dialogue is rendered in dollar signs. This piece feels uncanny in the Freudian sense--as if it is peopled not by actual humans but by ghosts or automata. (There are echoes of Ma's debut novel, in which a pandemic turns people into zombies that repeat the same everyday action over and over.) In the stories that follow, Ma uses elements of the fantastic but grounds them in a reality that is more recognizably our own. "Without question, the best part of taking G is the beginning. The sensation of invisibility is one of floating. You walk around with a lesser gravity, a low-helium balloon the day after a birthday party." "G" is the name of a story and the name of the drug the narrator of the story takes with her best friend, Bonnie, on her last night in New York. What begins as a tale about two young women engaging in low-key mayhem because no one can see them turns into a story about two girls who were pressured to become friends because they were both Chinese immigrants--although with very dissimilar experiences of life in the United States. What they want from invisibility is different, and what Bonnie wants from the friend who is about to leave her is everything. The ideas of home and belonging recur throughout the collection. In "Returning," the narrator meets the man who will become her husband when they are both on a panel for immigrant authors. A trip to his native country to participate in a festival--a trip that is an attempt to salvage their marriage--ends in a macabre, desperate rite. Ma also writes about motherhood and academic life and abusive relationships. These are rich themes, and the author explores them with the logic of dreams. Haunting and artful. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

Following her debut novel, Severance (2018), Ma again proves her biting sense of humor and gift for subtlety in a collection of eight short stories, all surreal and jarring in the most sensational way. A woman lives with her husband, who only speaks in dollar signs, and all of her ex-boyfriends in a giant Los Angeles house. Bea takes an invisibility-inducing drug called G with her childhood best friend, who is known to be untrustworthy but shares her experience of otherness. And in another story, a writer loses her spouse on a trip to his home country of Garboza. There, she discovers amid the panic that the Morning Festival they're heading to involves a tradition of literal burial and rebirth. Playful and melancholic, Ma masterfully takes on heavy topics such as abuse and loneliness with sprawling, spinning plotlines. All the while, she interweaves the experience of Chinese American women, touching on visibility, assimilation, and the expectations of immigrant mothers. A fantastical collection that grows more and more captivating with each page. Copyright 2022 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2022 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

In six stories set mostly in central New York State, Natural History revisits the family of scientists, teachers, and innovators the expansive Barrett has featured regularly since her National Book Award-winning collection Ship Fever. From passengers quarantined while on cruise to a woman explaining to her barstool companion that she has ESP to a hyena loose in the south of France, I Walk Between the Raindrops shows off the award-winning Boyle's trenchant prose (50,000-copy first printing). In Bliss Montage, NYPL Young Lion Ma (Severance) reveals the absurdism of the everyday through push-the-envelope stories featuring a woman living with all her former boyfriends, relationships based on an invisibility drug, and the idea that burying oneself alive can cure all manner of ills (75,000-copy first printing). From prolific, icepick-exact short story writer Means, a Pushcart and O. Henry honoree, Two Nurses, Smoking explores grief and survival in pieces ranging from two nurses exchanging quiet support in a parking lot to a couple reuniting on the ski slopes after having met in a bereavement group.

Copyright 2022 Library Journal.

Copyright 2022 Library Journal.
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LJ Express Reviews

NYPL Young Lion Ma (Severance) reveals the absurdity of the everyday through push-the-envelope stories that feel weird and disturbing, perhaps self-consciously so, until the reader surrenders to their sensibility and decides that they're brilliant. A woman lives in a large compound with her husband and all her former boyfriends; one runs off, hunted by the police, and in a follow-up story the protagonist spots him on the street, follows him, and reveals startling truths about him to his suddenly anxious new lover. A young woman on the verge of a new life has a last-minute visit with a friend she hasn't seen for some time, as they have little in common and mostly bonded over a drug they once took together; the power play here is as scary as it is absolute. In a story of marital tension that forces us to ponder how well we know the people to whom we're closest, a wife travels with her husband to his homeland, the backwater Garbosa, and learns that the festival he wants to attend involves burying oneself alive as a means of renewal. Throughout, the surreal prickles the skin but starts to feel almost welcomingly familiar. VERDICT Highly recommended for readers looking for an inventive take on contemporary life.—Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal

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Copyright 2022 LJExpress.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Ma (Severance) examines themes of otherness and disconnection in this fantastical and often brilliant collection. In "Tomorrow," an arm protrudes from a woman's vagina during her pregnancy, which her doctor says is "not ideal" but "relatively safe," his cursory advice gleaned from a website that "looks like WebMD." The mother, like many of the book's protagonists, emigrated from China to the U.S. as a child; later in the story, she returns to visit her great-aunt, with whom she communicates primarily through a translation app. In "Returning," a woman travels with her husband to his native country, the fictional Garboza, only to be abandoned by him at the airport. The protagonist, who wrote a novel about a couple who "during an economic depression, decide to cryogenically freeze themselves," experiences ambivalence about her marriage. These stories, and the elliptical "Office Hours" (about a young woman's semi-romance with her film professor, who has a Narnia-like magical wardrobe in his office), are enchanting, full of intelligence, dry humor, and an appealing self-awareness. On the other hand, a couple of entries—such as "Los Angeles," about a woman living with 100 of her ex-boyfriends—don't quite manifest into something more than their conceit. Nevertheless, there is much to enjoy. Agent: Jin Auh, Wylie Agency. (Sept.)

Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly.
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