Those opulent days A mystery

Jacquie Pham

Book - 2024

"Jacquie Pham's transportive debut, Those Opulent Days, delivers a classic historical murder mystery centered around the glamor, violence, wealth, and opium of 1920's French-colonial Vietnam that meshes the structural brilliance of Lucy Foley's The Guest List with the historical vitality of Vanessa Chan's The Storm We Made. Duy, Phong, Minh, and Edmond have been best friends since childhood. Now, as young men running their families' formidable businesses, they make up Saigon's most powerful group of friends in 1928 Vietnam's elite society. Until one of them is murdered. In a lavish mansion on a hill in Dalat, all four men have gathered for an evening of indulgence, but one of them won't survive t...he night. Toggling between this fatal night and the six days leading up to it, told from the perspectives of the four men, their mothers, their servants, and their lovers, an intricate web of terror, loyalty, and well-kept secrets begins to unravel. As the story creeps closer to the murder, and as each character becomes a suspect, the true villain begins to emerge: colonialism, the French occupation of Vietnam, and the massive economic differences that catapult the wealthy into the stratosphere while the poor starve on the streets. Those Opulent Days is at once both a historical novel of vivid intensity and a classically structured, pitch-perfect murder mystery featuring a robust cast of characters you won't soon forget"--

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Novels
Romans
Published
New York : Atlantic Monthly Press 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Jacquie Pham (author)
Edition
First edition. First Grove Atlantic hardcover edition
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9780802163806
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Pham debuts with a memorable and disturbing historical set in French-occupied Vietnam. In 1918, four wealthy boys--native Annamites Duy, Phong, and Minh, and Frenchman Edmond--steal away from their boarding school to visit a fortune teller who warns that one of them will die by poison. A decade later, after the boys have grown into formidable businessmen, one of them dies such a death, at a debaucherous party in an extravagant Dalat mansion. From there, the narrative splinters, with flashbacks from each protagonist's perspective buttressed by recollections from their employees, lovers, and mothers that give gradual context to the central tragedy. What emerges is less a traditional mystery than a bleak portrait of life under colonization, with special focus on the ill treatment of women and animals by elites, and the spiritual hopelessness that saturates their ranks: even Phong, the most brilliant and promising of the friends, abandons his studies to smoke Duy's family's opium and pursue a doomed love affair with Edmond. Pham's prose is lyrical, and her evocation of the period immersive, but the sprawling cast means some secondary characters don't quite come to life. Still, this is a tense and unique dispatch from a key period in Vietnamese history. Agent: Danya Kukafka, Trellis Literary. (Nov.)

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