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Background
Ru is a novel by Vietnamese-born Canadian novelist Kim Thúy, first published in French in 2009 by Montreal publisher Libre Expression. It was translated into English in 2012 by Sheila Fischman and published by Vintage Canada.

Plot
The novel tells the tale of the protagonist, An Tinh Nguyen, born in Saigon in 1968 during the Tet Offensive who immigrates to Canada with her family as a child. The book switches between her childhood in Vietnam where she was born into a large and wealthy family, her time as a boat person when she left her country for a refugee camp in Malaysia, and her life as an early immigrant in Granby, Quebec. The story is told in the by a first-person narrative.

Title
The word Ru has significance in both French and Vietnamese. In French, the word means rivulet or flow of water, tears or blood. In Vietnamese, the word means cradle or lullaby.

About
She wrote the book in honor of the people who welcome her and her family into their life when their first arrived. War, migration, and resettlement are themes that reoccur throughout the novel.

Style
Ru is read like an autobiography but is written as the fictional tale of migrant experiences. The style of the book has been described as being an auto-fiction.

The book tells the story of the first wave of Boat People who left Vietnam and the trauma they lived through, taking the reader on their journey. Boat people is a term used to describe Southern Vietnamese peoples fleeing between 1977 and 1979. It is estimated that more than 200,000 boat people fled, many of which drowned.

The novel is written in a 144 of unnumbered vignettes, that share the memories of the protagonist in three completely different environments: her childhood home in Vietnam, a refugee camp in Malaysia, and the town of Granby in Quebec, Canada. The style of writing resembles memories shared by the narrator, which are woven together to create a narrative.

The characters included in the novel are the narrator’s family members, both immediate and extended, as well as friends, and individual whom she encountered along her journey. The families member of the narrator, are not given names but rather given numbers. By having nameless characters, the author depersonalizes them and creates room for the reader's imagination to fill the blanks.

Awards & Nominations
The original French edition of the novel was selected for the 2014 edition of Le Combat des livres, where it was defended by author and physician Jean-François Chicoine. Its English translation was selected for the 2015 edition of Canada Reads by film critic and Toronto International Film Festival programmer Cameron Bailey,[4] and won the competition on March 19, 2015.[5]

The English edition, translated by Sheila Fischman,[2] was published in 2012 by Random House Canada and was a shortlisted nominee for the 2012 Scotiabank Giller Prize,[3] the 2012 Governor General's Award for French to English translation, and the 2013 Amazon.ca First Novel Award.


 * WINNER 2015 - Canada Reads
 * WINNER 2011 – Grand Prix littéraire Archambault
 * WINNER 2011 – Mondello Prize for Multiculturalism
 * WINNER 2010 – Prix du Grand Public Salon du livre––Essai/Livre pratique
 * WINNER 2010 – Governor General’s Award for Fiction (French-language)
 * WINNER 2010 – Grand Prix RTL-Lire at the Salon du livre de Paris

Reception
Kim Thu ́y lives and works in Canada. However, the audience, discourse, and geographical locations in Ru are taken beyond the borders of Canada. The book has been published in Canada, both in English an french, as well as eighteen other countries.

An interview Thuy describes the different perspective readers have depended on where they are from. She gives the example of people in Romania focusing on the communist regime described in the book, while people in France focused on the structure and the language used in the book.

The book has been seen as controversial, especially in Vietnam where the author describes the communist history as still being recent and a sensitive topic. Thuy goes on to discuss that the history of the Boat People has not yet become part of Vietnam history. The novel Ru does not portrait the communities in a complete negative perspective, which has caused controversy as a portion of the Vietnamese population blame the communist for the hardships their families endured.