(5/17/2023)
Banyan Moon explores three generations of women of Vietnamese origin and their discoveries, loves and lives. It is poignant and direct, inventive, and introspective. It takes place from the perspective of each woman, in Vietnam, in Florida and elsewhere, across the times of each. With the author providing only tangential clues along the way, it also reads like a mystery, looking for connections and intersections between the lives of the women. Relationships exist that struggle to survive despite seemingly unsurmountable odds, generational gaps, cultural wars. I was particularly intrigued by the insights the author provided about war-time Vietnam from the viewpoint of the common resident, trying to maintain a normal life under the stress of multi-year war and strive.
For a book club with multiple generational members, it might spark conversations about family, the Vietnam war, women in times of extreme stress, coping in adversity and other hot topics. For the individual reader, getting drawn into the lives of each of these women was intriguing, thought-provoking, and insightful.