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Arid Dreams

Stories

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"One of Thailand's preeminent female writers . . . Each of her stories poses its own moral challenge, pleasurable and unsettling at once . . . phenomenal." —NPR.org
In thirteen stories that investigate ordinary and working-class Thailand, characters aspire for more but remain suspended in routine. They bide their time, waiting for an extraordinary event to end their stasis. A politician's wife imagines her life had her husband's accident been fatal, a man on death row requests that a friend clear up a misunderstanding with a sex worker, and an elevator attendant feels himself wasting away while trapped, immobile, at his station all day.
With curious wit, this collection offers revelatory insight and subtle critique, exploring class, gender, and disenchantment in a changing country.
"Arid Dreams is stark, sly, and unsparingly brilliant. Here is a writer unafraid to pick up the scalpel of her prose and use it to cut to the bone. Each story is more compelling than the last, each combines dark humor with deeper truths about human desire and depravity. I couldn't look away." —Preti Taneja, author of We That Are Young
"Pimwana's characters, whether they are truck drivers or farmers, doctors or prisoners, are realized with depth, affection, and a good degree of humor. The petty concerns of their daily lives—frustrated careers, infidelity, reconnecting with distant family—are hypnotically rendered in Pimwana's telling. This is an exciting debut." —Publishers Weekly
"A deep and thoughtful exploration of human psyches and the dreams of ordinary Thais in an ever-changing socio-economic environment." —Bangkok Post
"An exacting look at the moments of joy and tragedy, of hope and desire." —Independent Book Review
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 18, 2019
      In her incisive English-language debut collection, Pimwana profiles ordinary Thais as they look to realize their hopes and longings while navigating webs of family and community. In the title story, an unnamed young man returns to the beachside town of his youth, now overrun by tourists, and falls for a mysterious masseuse. “Sandals” follows two children, Tongjai and Kui, pulled from their lives in the city to help their parents in the sugar cane harvest. In “Wood Children,” Prakorb, an older man, grows concerned when his younger wife, Mala, begins carving children out of wood after they fail to conceive. Pimwana’s characters, whether they are truck drivers or farmers, doctors or prisoners, are realized with depth, affection, and a good degree of humor. The petty concerns of their daily lives—frustrated careers, infidelity, reconnecting with distant family— are hypnotically rendered in Pimwana’s telling. This is an exciting debut.

    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2019
      Thirteen short stories by a Thai writer making her English debut examine life under the strictures of capitalism and rigid gender roles.In these stories, published in Thailand from 1995 to 2014, villagers, prostitutes, and wage workers struggle with the impossibility of their dreams in lives marked by drudgery. In "The Attendant," an elevator operator thinks wistfully of a youth spent hauling cassava roots on a farm, in stark contrast to the atomized work his body does now, operating a deadening piece of machinery shaped like a coffin. In "The Awaiter," the title character is unemployed, aimless, and hoping for human connection when he finds money next to a bus stop and waits for someone to come back for it. Those who hope for a glamorous rise to the top end up reflecting bitterly on their choices: In "The Second Book," Boonsong becomes a promising politician thanks to his connections to a powerful kingpin; when that kingpin is killed, Boonsong's hopes--both his political ambitions and, eventually, even his childhood dreams--are summarily dashed. And in "Within These Walls," a politician's wife realizes, as her grievously injured husband lies in the hospital, that her life has been entirely defined by his choices. Because these characters are trapped, either by their circumstances or by their own obsessive thought processes, the prose is rife with repetition, an effective narrative strategy that can also become frustrating: "I was the one suffering from having to lay hands on it. Isn't it twisted? When I hurt others, I'm the one that suffers; when others hurt me, I'm the one that suffers again." Several of the stories are told with heavy irony from the perspectives of blinkered or boorish men whose foibles and fragility seemingly are the point. But these stories about gender also arrive at the most unsatisfying insights: In the title story, the sex-obsessed protagonist ultimately "realize[s] that, with women you'll never stand a chance of sleeping with, it's better to learn as much as you can about them, until lust gives way to other feelings." Many of these stories, though punctuated with flashes of mordant humor, conclude with similarly pithy, oddly formal lessons.Earthy, spare stories that paint a bleak portrait of human shortcomings.

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