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The Emperor of Gladness

by Ocean Vuong
 Book cover for 'The Emperor of Gladness' by Ocean Vuong, featuring a evocative and perhaps melancholic design. Suggests themes of literary fiction, found family, working-class life, addiction, resilience, and the search for beauty amidst hardship. Ideal for readers of profound and poetic contemporary novels.

Book Summary

The instant New York Times bestseller - Oprah's Book Club Pick - Ocean Vuong returns with a bighearted novel about chosen family, unexpected friendship, and the stories we tell ourselves in order to survive

The hardest thing in the world is to live only once...

One late summer evening in the post-industrial town of East Gladness, Connecticut, nineteen-year-old Hai stands on the edge of a bridge in pelting rain, ready to jump, when he hears someone shout across the river. The voice belongs to Grazina, an elderly widow succumbing to dementia, who convinces him to take another path. Bereft and out of options, he quickly becomes her caretaker. Over the course of the year, the unlikely pair develops a life-altering bond, one built on empathy, spiritual reckoning, and heartbreak, with the power to transform Hai's relationship to himself, his family, and a community on the brink.

Following the cycles of history, memory, and time, The Emperor of Gladness shows the profound ways in which love, labor, and loneliness form the bedrock of American life. At its heart is a brave epic about what it means to exist on the fringes of society and to reckon with the wounds that haunt our collective soul. Hallmarks of Ocean Vuong's writing-formal innovation, syntactic dexterity, and the ability to twin grit with grace through tenderness-are on full display in this story of loss, hope, and how far we would go to possess one of life's most fleeting mercies: a second chance.

Penguin Random House | May 13, 2025 | 416 pages | ISBN:978-0593831878

From the publisher

Discussion Questions

1. There are two epigraphs that open the book-one quotation spoken by Hamlet about the death of Polonius in Hamlet, and an excerpt from the Wallace Stevens poem "The Emperor of Ice Cream" about the true reality of death. What does the inclusion of these epigraphs invite you to think about? What do they suggest about the cycles of life and death in the novel? As Hai moves through the four seasons in the four different sections of the book, how do the recurring reminders of cyclicality affect your thinking about the fate of the characters?

2. Hai's immigration story begins with the "ruinous wasteland" left after the American War in Vietnam, and continues with his mother and grandmother working to make sure he was thefirst in his family to go to college (p. 81). Hai tells Grazina that he used to dream about writinga "novel that held everything [he] loved, including unlovable things" (p. 35), a dream that islater described as a "bigger life" that he never achieved. How is the American dream portrayed through Hai's immigration story-is it achievable, and for whom? How does Grazina's immigration story from Lithuania relate to the American dream?

3. Grazina tells Hai that "[t]o be alive and try to be a decent person, and not turn it into anything big or grand . . . is enough" (p. 251). Grazina's perspective on enough is partly informed by the fact that she had everything, and lost it in World War II. What do you think the novel is saying about whether or not dreams can come true for these characters? What do you think the novel is saying about social class considering that the main characters are all struggling to make ends meet? What is enough for them?

4. When Hai gets hired at HomeMarket, he "regained a real, quantifiable foothold in the world," and he had never felt "so included in something" (p. 59). What are the ways in which Hai's relationships with his HomeMarket coworkers BJ, Maureen, Wayne, and Russia provide him with a community he needs? How does HomeMarket become a real home to him? Why is Hai able to find a home and family there, and not with his mother or in college?

5. Although the cast of characters is from diverse racial, cultural, and ethnic backgrounds, they find commonality in their family stories. They share laughs and meals together, and they also have shared trauma. Just as Grazina lives with the trauma of World War II, Hai and Sony, and their parents, deal with the effects of the American War in Vietnam. How do the different ways they see the world help them to learn from each other?

6. Hai has several mother figures in his life including Grazina and Maureen. When Hai asks Maureen about how she was good to her deceased son Paul, she responds that "when you're somebody's mother, nothing's good enough" (p. 359). Considering Hai's strained relationshipwith his biological mother, what do you think the role of mothers is in this novel? What arethe different things each mother figure offers? Do you think Hai's relationship with hisbiological mother can be repaired?

7. The novel has a fluid timeline as the past, present, and future are often mixed up in the mindsof characters. Hai helps Grazina relive her past, and he wonders "[W]hat did it matter which timeline they were in" (p. 252) while Maureen believes in the Mandela effect of multiple timelines existing at the same time (p. 265). What is the role of time in the novel? Why is the past sopowerful for characters?

8. There are many ghosts and ghost stories in this novel: Hai comforts Grazina initially by singing her a Vietnamese song to raise the dead (p. 34), and Ba ngoai claims that the Stonewall Jackson Museum has ghosts (p. 160) and demons (p. 165). What role do you think ghosts play in this novel? Are they friendly or harmful? Who do they haunt, and why?

9. Hai argues to Sony that they don't need to be soldiers, and that "most people are soft and scared" (p. 343). Hai says that we tell ourselves stories to make life more "bearable" (p. 344). How is the vulnerability of the characters related to their humanity? What are the different stories these characters tell themselves, and how do those stories make their lives more livable?

10.Hai explains that Noah's death by overdose quickly followed by his ba ngoai's death were a couple of the reasons that he dropped out of college (p. 190). What are the different ways characters cope with death in this novel, and how are characters still haunted by the deaths of others?

11. When Hai and Sony look at a photo of their mothers, Sony declares them to be "[b]eautiful, short losers," which makes Hai wonder "[w]hat good is beauty, any beauty, if nobody wins" (p. 231). Where do you see beauty in this novel where the characters are losing so much? How would you answer Hai's question about the role of beauty in our lives?

12. The novel often compares truth and reality to lies and illusion. What is the novel's relationship with the truth if Hai lies to his mother about going to medical school (p. 85), and Sony knows the truth behind the lies his mother has been telling about what happened to his father (p. 368)? Why do characters lie, and what are the consequences of those lies? How might lies be kindnesses in this novel considering the truth that the lies cover?

13. At the end of the novel, Vuong leaves readers with images of both hope and darkness. He gives us a look into the future of the other main characters as well as HomeMarket, but leaves out Hai's future. Instead, Hai remains in the present, inside a dumpster. He is in an enclosed space, talking to his mother about the spaciousness inside people (396). There are other moments of hope at the end of the novel-Hai giving Sony the money to get Aunt Kim out of prison-juxtaposed with a violent final image: the emperor hogs dragged to the butchery (p. 397). What ending would you write for Hai's life? What do you make of the hopeful and tragic elements co-existing in these final moments? The relationship between hope and despair? Which theme do you think is most powerful in the story?
Discussion Questions by the publisher



Praise


"Vuong's protagonist, Hai, is a drug-addicted college dropout living in the fictional town of East Gladness, Connecticut. After he forms an unlikely bond with an elderly widow from Lithuania, whose house he moves into, he begins working at a fast-food restaurant, HomeMarket, where all of the employees are, like him, searching for some kind of home. The novel brims with feeling for these figures, who, though scorned by society, belong to it nonetheless." -The New Yorker

"On the surface, The Emperor of Gladness is about people on the margins and how they survive hardship, but it's also a story of how contradictions often exist in conjunction. War and loss run through the pages of The Emperor of Gladness, but so do love and joy. Estrangement ripples through the novel too, yet The Emperor of Gladness celebrates profound connections ... Soulful and at times heart-wrenching." -The Seattle Times

"In [The Emperor of Gladness] Ocean Vuong blends grief, healing, and resilience into a powerful and poetic narrative." -PBS NewsHour

"The Emperor of Gladness is a truly great novel about work-still an under-acknowledged topic in American fiction. Hard work is supposed to get you somewhere-that's part of the promise of America. But the pay-off feels much less certain to these characters ... Vuong's achingly austere artistic vision leaves it to his readers to imagine the better world he won't let himself depict on the pages of this wonderful novel." -Maureen Corrigan, Fresh Air

"An admirable compliment to [Vuong's] resume of work and widens his stance as an artist that continues to provide irreplaceable commentary on American life, speaking not to his readers, but through ... The Emperor of Gladness is a reminder that to be an American, no matter how or why you got here, is to be a product of something else. Vuong writes for the very real and individual lives that exist within the blur of an average day ... A reader's high is imminent with Vuong ... His prose often forces you to look up from the page to fully absorb them and remember where you really are." -Chicago Review of Books

"The Emperor of Gladness takes existentialism to a deeply intimate level, leaving the reader to contemplate what it is to live in a messy, complicated world of wars, addiction, class struggles and good people looking for second chances ... We piece together the characters' stories the way you would with real people in real life; through snippets that build atop each other until you can patch together a narrative of the relationships that left the biggest scars and the events that had profound impacts. Vuong achieves more by writing beside his characters than one would by writing a straightforward story about them. True and gritty." -Associated Press

"Ocean Vuong is uniquely talented at capturing the tender and wrought feelings of loss. His novels are live wires of emotion, crackling at each page with possibility. The Emperor of Gladness is no different." -Chicago Review of Books

"Poet Vuong follows up his acclaimed first novel, On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous, with a searching and beautiful story of a troubled young man ... Vuong's scenes are vivid, and the pitch-perfect dialogue cuts like a knife ... This downbeat tale soars to astonishing heights." -Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"[E]xploring themes of war and labor-their wretchedness, their dignity-Vuong's epic-feeling novel is a determined portrait of community, caretaking, and characters who, if they only have each other, have quite a lot." -Booklist (starred review)

"[A]mbitious ... The references to Slaughterhouse-Five and The Brothers Karamazov underscore Vuong's interest in exploring war and morality, but this is remarkable as a novel that tries to look at those themes outside of conventional realism or combat porn ... A sui generis take on the surprising and cruel ways violence is passed on across generations." -Kirkus (starred review)

"The Emperor of Gladness is a poetic, dramatic and vivid story. Epic in its sweep, the novel also handles intimacy and love with delicacy and deep originality. Hai and Grazina are taken from the margins of American life by Ocean Vuong and, by dint of great sympathy and imaginative genius, placed at the very center of our world." -Colm Toibin, author of Long Island and Brooklyn

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