'A science-fiction novel involving clones, a psychic, and empathy as a recreational drug.
'We have always been we. Then they forced us to become you and I...
'Empathy consists of two stories told in parallel.
'Vuong is one of five Vietnamese clones that have come of age at 25. The Department in Hanoi is allowing them to meet after being separated for twenty years. Lian has murdered her foster father after being forced to eat meat. Geraldine is dying of cancer in Australia. Giang and Khanh were brought up together as twins in New Zealand and are telepathic. They have been used for research over their lifetimes. Vuong discovers that the data kept on all of them has been used to develop empathy, the latest party drug.
'My meets Truong in Berlin who introduces her to empathy which makes the user supersensitive to other people's feelings. My's mother is a cleaner at CHESS, a multinational chemical company, and My comes to believe her mother is ex-Stasi and an industrial spy for Vietnamese government. My comes down from the drug after hearing about the saturation point when the penetration of empathy would be such that the world's population would be pacified. She discovers that Truong is actually the one who is in the pay of the Vietnamese government and her mother is just a cleaner. She tries to out the conspiracy in the media but no one believes her...' (Publication summary)
'I’ve been thinking a lot about ghosts and the different ways we are haunted. A phenomenon often represented in literature as otherworldly, mythical—‘not real’. But in ‘reality’ spirits appear as sensations or experiences that are quite ordinary, generally ignored or misinterpreted when they don’t resemble the ghoulish horrors captured in TV, film, books and religion. I began reading Hoa Pham’s The Other Shore when I started an archiving job at the State Library of Western Australia. While ostensibly a role that requires collecting and analysing photographic materials, cataloguing, provenance, data integrity and preserving history, it’s fundamentally about dead people and what we do with their ghosts. Nations like so-called Australia or Việt Nam—where Pham’s novel takes place—are full of ghosts, yet the governments of both have a sly way of engaging with them.'(Introduction)
'I’ve been thinking a lot about ghosts and the different ways we are haunted. A phenomenon often represented in literature as otherworldly, mythical—‘not real’. But in ‘reality’ spirits appear as sensations or experiences that are quite ordinary, generally ignored or misinterpreted when they don’t resemble the ghoulish horrors captured in TV, film, books and religion. I began reading Hoa Pham’s The Other Shore when I started an archiving job at the State Library of Western Australia. While ostensibly a role that requires collecting and analysing photographic materials, cataloguing, provenance, data integrity and preserving history, it’s fundamentally about dead people and what we do with their ghosts. Nations like so-called Australia or Việt Nam—where Pham’s novel takes place—are full of ghosts, yet the governments of both have a sly way of engaging with them.'(Introduction)