
Viet Thanh Nguyen’s first recognition as a writer happened when he was eight years old as a student at Lowell Elementary School in San Jose. “Lester the Cat” is a story about an urban cat who, stricken with ennui and bored with city life, flees and falls in love with a country cat. Viet’s childhood story was selected for a prize at the former Martin Luther King Jr. Library located on W. San Carlos Street (now located at 150 San Fernando).
As an eight-year-old, the experience left a big impression, both as a very public and private experience—publicly, because he received recognition from the very library where he absorbed literature throughout his childhood and, privately, because his parents weren’t able to take him to the award ceremony. His school’s librarian took him, while no one in his family knew. To Viet, it was his little secret, and although he did not make a conscious decision to become a writer, he found that writing books could be fun and interesting.
Viet was born in Ban Mê Thuột, Viet Nam (now Buôn Mê Thuột) and came to the United States as a refugee in 1975. His family settled in San Jose in the late 1970s, opening one of the first Vietnamese grocery stores, Sàigòn Mới (later demolished to make room for the Miro Luxury Apartments on East Santa Clara Street). His path to becoming a writer dates back to being eight years old, dabbling with journaling, poetry, short fiction, and drama through high school and into college. This period, according to Viet, was the “first of many disasters in aspirations to being a writer.” He adds, “I think all writers have to make all kinds of mistakes.”
His ambition to be a serious writer and scholar solidified while he was a student at UC Berkeley. Not only did his education further his interest in literature and writing, but he also developed awareness as an Asian American and an English and ethnic studies major. The opportunity to read beyond canonical Western writers—including women, BIPOC, and decolonizing writers—was crucial in that it gave him a sense that there is a serious purpose to literature. Viet’s time at Berkeley developed his understanding of literature, both in his approach as a scholar and as a writer. Before then, according to Viet, “I think I had a very romantic idea of literature,” he says, adding, “From 19 to 20 years of age, I began to think of literature as a political, theoretical, and eventually philosophical issue.”
Fast forward to the present and Viet is a celebrated scholar, author, and essayist. His novel, The Sympathizer, is a New York Times Bestseller, winner of the Pulitzer Prize, and has debuted on over thirty bookof-the-year lists. His writing (although not a complete list) includes the sequel, The Committed, A Man of Two Faces, The Refugees, two children’s books, (Chicken of the Sea and Simone), and his next book, slated for 2025, To Save and to Destroy: Writing as an Other Viet is thinking about writing even when he’s not physically writing—a process that involves thinking, planning, and revising, in addition to writing. He states, “There is something mysterious about inspiration and where that comes from, but you have to do the work to get to the inspiration, and to do the work just means you have to be doing something every single day, whether that’s the thinking, planning, writing, or revising.”
Understanding the inside and outside of language was key to Viet’s growth as a writer, “For me, I immersed myself as deeply as I could into the English-language literature,” he says. This absorption allowed Viet to understand how language works, not just as a tool, but how it works internally. Knowing some Vietnamese also allowed Viet to look at his writing both as an insider and an outsider. He shared, “One of the best compliments I got about The Sympathizer was a Vietnamese author coming up to me saying, ‘I can hear the rhythms of Vietnamese in your writing.’ And I don’t think I intended to do that, but the fact that it’s there because I have an inside and outside relationship with the language was really helpful.” In addition, Viet believes that all writers develop their own voice by finding whatever is authentic within themselves as a driver for their writing. To Viet, speaking your truth is crucial to being a successful writer.
“My personal identity could never be separated from the identity of being Vietnamese and eventually Asian American.” -Viet Thanh Nguyen
Viet’s work as a writer, critic, and essayist is undeniably tied to issues of identity and memory. Growing up in San Jose, he was exposed to the notion of the collective identity at a young age because of the existence of racism and his own awareness of how the Vietnam War impacted Vietnamese refugees and Americans as a whole. Stories have power, and to Viet, the complexity of power as it relates to his individual and collective identity gave him the authority to write about his own story and the Vietnamese American experience. “I believed in the idea that stories had the power to transport me out of San Jose, my parent’s house, the grocery store that was our reality, but then I realized that stories have the power to destroy as well, the power to save as well as destroy. And that’s the complexity within power that also made me convinced I wanted to become a writer.”
Viet’s body of work through this lens of identity and memory is deeply personal. He shares, “My personal identity could never be separated from the identity of being Vietnamese and eventually Asian American. Those identities were inevitably tied in with memory, because how we think about the past, our individual past, but also the collective past of our cultures and nations is going to impact our sense of identity. There’s always been this dynamic between individual and collective memory for me that has been tied to issues of my racial identity but also to America’s national identity as well.”
Viet’s drive to speak to identity and memory, to write the stories that have brought him success, has been partly shaped by his upbringing in San Jose. He recalls, “I grew up in a very edgy part of San Jose’s downtown by the 280 access ramp on South 10th Street, and it was a tough environment to grow up in. But it was that friction between the beautiful diversities but also the economic struggle of so many people in that area that taught me so much about human nature and provided me with the stories that would eventually be really important to my motivation as a writer, scholar, and essayist.”
Viet Thanh Nguyen was raised in San Jose, educated in the East Bay at UC Berkeley, and now resides in Los Angeles as the Aerol Arnold Chair of English and professor of English, American studies and ethnicity, and comparative literature at the University of Southern California. “What’s important to me about being a writer is just writing,” he states. The Bay Area provided Viet with an environment where stories—including his individual and collective identity—his complicated relationship with San Jose–could take root and shape his craft. “[Growing up in San Jose has] always been so much more complex, because it’s the difference between the comforting parts of San Jose and the difficult parts for my family and myself that generated the emotional friction that turned me into a writer.”
Instagram: viet.thanh.nguyen.writer