Ocean Vuong: When Words Pierce


Posted on May 31, 2021

With a name like Ocean, you are bound to make waves.


Ocean Vuong

Ocean Vuong’s grandparents met during the Vietnam War: his grandfather a white American navy soldier from Michigan and his grandmother a Vietnamese who grew up in the countryside. Vuong’s mother and aunts were separated in childhood, fearing their survival since they were of mixed race. Eventually, Vuong fled Vietnam with his family, first arriving in a refugee camp in the Philippines and then migrating to Connecticut after achieving asylum.


At age 11, Vuong became the first to learn to read in his family, which he suspects is because of a history of dyslexia in the family. He studied in Glastonbury High School, a school known for academic excellence, and then entered community college. After some time there, he shifted to Pace University to study marketing. He shifted again to Brooklyn College at the City University of New York to study 19th-century English literature. It was there that he finally obtained his BA in English. He later received his master of fine arts degree in poetry from New York University.


Vuong had his essays and poetry published in journals, such as Poetry, The Nation, Guernica, TriQuarterly, The New Yorker, The New York Times, and Narrative Magazine, among others. His first chapbook, Burnings, was published in 2011, and his first full-length collection, Night Sky with Exit Wounds, was published in 2016.


Aside from poetry, Vuong published a novel in 2019. On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous is an epistolary novel told from the perspective of a Vietnamese American son writing letters to his mother who couldn’t read. Little Dog, the author of the letters, recounts the life of his grandmother, Lan, who becomes a prostitute during the Vietnam War and marries a white American soldier. The grandmother later gives birth to Little Dog’s mother, Hong, whose father is not her husband. Hong, who grew up in the throes of war, suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder and manages to flee to the United States. Lan, Hong, and Little Dog all manage to migrate to the United States.


Vuong has received plenty of awards and fellowships in his career thus far, including the 2012 Stanley Kunitz Prize for Younger Poets, the 2013 Elizabeth George Foundation Fellowship, the 2014 Pushcart Prize, the 2016 Whiting Award for Poetry, the 2017 TS Eliot Prize, the 2018 Kundiman Fellowship, and the 2019 MacArthur Fellowship.


Ocean Vuong’s name comes from his mother, who used to call him Beach.



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