Tell Me Pleasant Things about Immortality
Stories
Description
SHORTLISTED FOR THE BC AND YUKON JIM DEVA PRIZE FOR WRITING THAT PROVOKES
From the bestselling, Canada Reads-shortlisted author of The Woo-Woo comes a wild, darkly hilarious, and poignant collection of immigrant horror stories. They'll haunt and consume you--in strange and unsettling ways.
Living forever isn't everything it's cracked up to be. Hearts can still break, looks can still fade, and money still matters, even in eternity. The ghosts, zombies, and demons in this collection are all shockingly human, and they're ready to spill their guts. Vanity, love, and tragedy are all candidly explored as the unfulfilled desires of the dead are echoed in the lives of modern-day immigrants. Story-by-story, the line between ghost and human, life and death, becomes increasingly blurred.
There's a courtesan from 17th century China who, try as she might, just can't manage to die. Grandmama Wu, who returns from the dead to protect her grandchildren from bullies. Not to mention an Internet-order bride who inadvertently brings the apocalypse to Nebraska City.
From Shanghai to Vancouver, the women in this collection haunt and are haunted--by first loves, troublesome family members, and traumatic memories. Intertwining horror, the supernatural, and mythology, Tell Me Pleasant Things about Immortality riotously critiques contemporary life and fearlessly illuminates the ways in which the past can devour us. A collection about transformation and what makes us human, it solidifies Lindsay Wong as one of the most vital and electrifying voices in Canadian literature today.
About this Author
LINDSAY WONG is the author of the critically acclaimed, award-winning, and bestselling memoir The Woo-Woo, which was a finalist for Canada Reads 2019. She has written a YA novel entitled My Summer of Love and Misfortune. Wong holds a BFA in creative writing from the University of British Columbia and an MFA in literary nonfiction from Columbia University. She currently teaches creative writing at the University of Winnipeg. Follow her on Twitter @LindsayMWong, Instagram @Lindsaywong.M, or visit www.lindsaywongwriter.com.
Reviews
SHORTLISTED FOR THE BC AND YUKON JIM DEVA PRIZE FOR WRITING THAT PROVOKES
One of
CBC's "32 Canadian books to read in spring 2023"
CBC's "30 highly anticipated Canadian titles coming this year"
CBC's "14 Canadian Collections to check out"
Chatelaine's "9 New Books To Read This Winter"
Winnipeg Free Press's "15 books to watch for in the first half of 2023"
Electric Lit's "7 Books About Grotesque Bodies: BIPOC writers on the margins get physical in their search for identity"
CityNews's "10 books for International Womens Day 2024"
"Drenched in morbidly dark humour, this collection of extremely entertaining immigrant horror stories reflects on class, death and family trauma."
--The Globe and Mail
"[A] haunting and darkly comic collection peopled by unforgettable characters."
--Chatelaine
"From a hair-chomping grandma ghost to nine-tail fox demons who snack on frat boys, the women of Tell Me Pleasant Things about Immortality are moody, sharp-tongued, and subversive. With humour and mischief, Lindsay Wong spins horrifying tales across continents and centuries. These stories slither through uncanny worlds and dredge up deep feelings of alienation, longing, and shame. Eccentric and unforgettable."
--Pik-Shuen Fung, author of Ghost Forest
"The stories in Tell Me Pleasant Things about Immortality will make you laugh, cry, cringe, and gasp. Here, Lindsay Wong, has created an absurd symphony of tragedy and joy that leads Asian Canadian writing into uncharted and new, incredible, directions. The horrible is hilarious, the tragic is titillating, the morbid is mirthful. In these stories you will find beauty, horror, pleasure, and play."
--Jenny Heijun Wills, author of Older Sister. Not Necessarily Related.
"Tell Me Pleasant Things about Immortality is a truly original collection of short stories, a book that brims over with otherworldly creatures, disaster, humour, and the unassailable bonds of familial love and hate. Lindsay Wong asks us to accompany her characters as they fight, dream, and survive in worlds that are on the verge of collapsing. It's a wild ride and I loved every second of it."
--Jen Sookfong Lee, author of Superfan and The Conjoined
"Fans of the black humour of Lindsay Wong's debut memoir The Woo-Woo can celebrate. This is a dark, hilarious and utterly brilliant collection that sees Wong unleashing her macabre imagination. Her doomed characters reflect the kaleidoscope of immigrant experiences; the stories skewer 'crazy rich Asian' stereotypes and deliver unique insights on intergenerational trauma and culture clash. A must-read!"
--Joanna Chiu, author of China Unbound, winner of the Writers' Trust Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for Political Writing
"In this exhilarating collection, characters seek exuberance in hardship; they struggle to make the most of life, death, and everything in between. Wong writes against Asian immigrant stereotypes with a singular voice, seemingly freewheeling and maximalist but always in tight, expert control. Utterly unforgettable!"
--YZ Chin, author of Edge Case
"Tell Me Pleasant Things About Immortality is an engrossing, entertaining, and haunting feat. Lindsay Wong expertly braids fable and nightmare into the story arc, oscillating between shocking and twisted, and heartfelt and humorous. Family drama quickly turns to revenge and gore, as characters morph and grow to surprising ends. Packed with curses, ghosts, and death, this collection captures an unease rarely explored, yet certain to be richly valued by readers."
--Derek Mascarenhas, Author of Coconut Dreams
"[Lindsay casts] her imaginative vision . . . widely while incorporating elements of magic realism, folklore, mythology, and the expected ghosts and demons. The result is a collection which is . . . dazzling and absolutely delightful."
--Toronto Star
"[A] funny, true, and subversive collection whose surrealism shocks the muck of everyday life into bright, astonishing relief. . . . The experience of reading the book features successive jolts of recognition, grief, and joy. There's a refreshing canniness to Wong's writing that challenges readers to think beyond what we assume we know about Chinese experiences and Asian-Canadian literature. . . . [and the] work is magnetic because the pull of love, just out of reach, propels everything."
--The Tyee
"The stories in Tell Me Pleasant Things about Immortality are rich with uncanniness and humour, highlighting the sorrows, longings, and textured relationships of marginalized voices, rediscovering and pulling characters--human or other--through new myth-like narratives that create a vivid past of their own. . . . Timeless."
--Quill & Quire
"Wong's collection of short stories is full of vivid, haunting, "body horror" imagery, but also glimmers with dark humour. At the heart of each story is an incisive commentary on the power that familial and cultural history and mythology hold over the way immigrants perceive themselves in relation to their world."
--Electric Lit
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