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A Long Stay in a Distant Land

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In this funny and inventive novel, the Lums are a death-stalked Chinese American family living in Orange County, California. Ever since Grandpa Melvin was inspired to join the US Army after watching a Popeye movie and—as family lore has it—unleashed a "relentless rain of steel death" upon the Nazis, Lum after Lum has been doomed to an untimely demise, be it by tainted cheeseburger or speeding ice-cream truck. Now young Louis must move back home with his father, Sonny, to prevent him from enacting the revenge he promises. But soon Louis finds himself searching for his long-lost uncle Bo Lum in Hong Kong. As Louis' search progresses, the tragicomic story of three generations of Lums in America is revealed through the eyes of Louis, Sonny, and Grandma Esther.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Count your blessings--you could be a Lum, the death-stalked family of this intriguing novel. Lums don't die in conventional ways either. Their ends come at the hands of ice cream trucks, cheeseburgers, and Nazis. Narrator James Yaegashi lovingly renders this story in an understated tone that fits the novel. His methodical pace and easy style nudge the action along and keep the book interesting. His deep voice is soothing and cool, and he makes dialogue sound as though it comes from real people. He runs into trouble only while trying to evoke convincing female characters. Unfortunately, he misses the mark, with one of the elderly females sounding like Marge Simpson. This is a minor issue though. R.I.G. (c) AudioFile 2005, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 28, 2005
      Chieng chronicles three generations of the comically ill-fated Chinese-American Lum family in his whimsical debut. Ever since Grandpa Melvin defied family wishes by enlisting during WWII, the Lums have been cursed by untimely deaths. Living in suburban Orange County, Calif., certainly doesn't protect them from wayward ice cream trucks and E. coli–laced burgers. So when the certified hermit of the family, Uncle Bo—who escaped the suffocating grip of his mother's love by moving to Hong Kong—stops returning her regular form letters, which ask questions like "Do you always plan on waking up the next day?" Grandma Esther suspects the worst. Grandson Louis decides to take a much-needed sabbatical from his father, Sonny—who comforts himself with rap music while calling for revenge on the overtired medical student who crashed into his wife's car and killed her—by traveling to Hong Kong to look for his uncle. Though Uncle Bo's plight remains central, the novel adheres to no strict narrative structure; it dips in and out of the Lum family over the course of half a century, treating readers to delectable nibbles of zany family lore and conjectural genealogies stretching back centuries. Charmingly eccentric and refreshingly unstereotypical, the novel still suffers a bit from its dibs and dabs construction, which can make the story feel too slick to be satisfying. Agent, Dorian Karchmar.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 2, 2005
      Narrator Yaegashi tackles with relish the male voices in this multigenerational comic novel about a luckless Chinese-American family's adventures in the New World, adopting vocal personae both gruff and high-pitched, adult and adolescent, silly and sincere. It is the female voices that trip him up; the book's mother character, desperately protective of her sons, sounds like nothing so much as a slightly soused female impersonator. Nonetheless, Yaegashi keeps it simple, mostly sticking to the background and allowing Cheng's heartfelt, wisecracking prose to take center stage. He ably adapts to the humorous cadences of the book's dialogue, giving each of the major characters easily identifiable voices without resorting to ethnic stereotyping. This is most evident in the case of Melvin, the good-natured but dull-witted father, to whom he appropriately gives a surfer's laid-back drawl. The book bounces from parents to children, and from California's Orange County to Hong Kong, covering a wide swath in time and space, but Yaegashi's reading gives the story a uniformly polished, enjoyable feel. Simultaneous release with the Bloomsbury hardcover (Reviews, Mar. 28).

    • Library Journal

      February 1, 2005
      The trials of three generations of a "death-stalked" Chinese family in Orange County, CA, make for a "hilarious" debut. Simultaneous Bloomsbury hardcover.

      Copyright 2005 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Library Journal

      March 15, 2006
      This apparent autobiographical novel by Chieng, who was born in Hong Kong and moved to California at age seven, is at once charming, bittersweet, and hilarious. The Lum family seem to be cursed to die young after Grandpa Melvin impulsively joins the U.S. Army to fight the Nazis, against the entire family -s objections. We follow several of the Lums, witnessing changes as each generation seems more Americanized. The boys join the Boy Scouts, become spelling bee champions, and enjoy jazz, while their father, Melvin, loves rap music and can state vital statistics about many rappers! The story, which moves back and forth in time, reveals many universal truths and is easy to follow and enjoyable, despite the death toll. Narrator James Yaegashi brilliantly captures each somewhat eccentric character, with elderly women being his best creations; he also excels at comic understatement. Large ethnic and particularly Chinese community libraries should add this outstanding work." -Susan G. Baird, Chicago"

      Copyright 2006 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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