How Does A Single Blade of Grass Thank the Sun?

By (author): Doretta Lau

Building on the success of the Journey Prize-shortlisted title story, the stories of How Does a Single Blade of Grass Thank the Sun? present an updated and whimsical new take on what it means to be Canadian. Lau alludes to the personal and political histories of a number of young Asian Canadian characters to explain their unique perspectives of the world, artfully fusing pure delusion and abstract perception with heartbreaking reality.Correspondingly, the book’s title refers to an interview with Chinese basketball star Yao Ming, who when asked about the Shanghai Sharks, the team that shaped his formative sporting years, responded, “How does a single blade of grass thank the sun?” Lau’s stories feature the children and grandchildren of immigrants, transnational adoptees and multiracial adults who came of age in the 1990s–all struggling to find a place in the Western world and using the only language they know to express their hopes, fears and expectations.

AUTHOR

Doretta Lau

Doretta Lau is a journalist who covers arts and culture for Artforum, South China Morning Post, The Wall Street Journal Asia and Bazaar Art Hong Kong. She completed an MFA in Writing at Columbia University. Her fiction and poetry have appeared in Event, Grain Magazine, Prairie Fire, Prism
International, RicePaper, SubTerrain
and Zen Monster. She splits her time
between Vancouver and Hong Kong, where she is at work on a novel and a
screenplay.


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Building on the success of the Journey Prize-shortlisted title story, the stories of How Does a Single Blade of Grass Thank the Sun? present an updated and whimsical new take on what it means to be Canadian. Lau alludes to the personal and political histories of a number of young Asian Canadian characters to explain their unique perspectives of the world, artfully fusing pure delusion and abstract perception with heartbreaking reality.Correspondingly, the book’s title refers to an interview with Chinese basketball star Yao Ming, who when asked about the Shanghai Sharks, the team that shaped his formative sporting years, responded, “How does a single blade of grass thank the sun?” Lau’s stories feature the children and grandchildren of immigrants, transnational adoptees and multiracial adults who came of age in the 1990s–all struggling to find a place in the Western world and using the only language they know to express their hopes, fears and expectations.

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Details

Dimensions:

120 Pages
8.5in * 5.5in * 0.3in
0.57lb

Published:

April 05, 2014

Publisher:

Nightwood Editions

ISBN:

9780889712935

Book Subjects:

FICTION / Short Stories

Language:

eng

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