Author:Bich Minh Nguyen

Sisters Van and Linny - like their father - are short. But they couldn't be more different. Van's the overachiever - a high-flying lawyer with a pristine home and husband, until the husband walks out. Linny is fashionable, flighty, works for a catering firm called You Did It Dinners and has just been told by her married lover that he's sticking with his wife.
So much to talk about. And yet they don't.
However, when their father invents a device to enable short people to reach high objects but needs to become an American citizen to sell it, the sisters are forced to work together to help him. If he's ever to succeed in an American Idol-style reality TV show for desperate inventors, Van and Linny must put aside their differences and admit what it is they have in common . . .
A funny, heart-warming take on family unity and cultural identity
—— Marie ClaireLoaded with tender charm and wry, lightly observed insights
—— Daily MailA smoothly pleasurable read
—— GuardianFans of Amy Tan and Monica Ali will love Short Girls, which has already been dubbed a Vietnamese The Joy Luck Club
—— RedAn intelligent, bittersweet debut novel
—— Sunday TimesNguyen is an amusing observer of assimilation angst...this gentle-comedy of inter-generational strife is a polished and poised affair
—— IndependentFascinating... the letters radiate kindness, generosity, insecurity and consistency
—— Independent on SundayInvaluable
—— ObserverThese letters burst with affectionate salutations, explosions of rage and sudden enthusiasms
—— Daily TelegraphThe travel writer's wanderlust generated bestselling and Booker-nominated work, but his collected letters unveil the man behind the books
—— TimesThese letters are as close to the real McCoy as we're going to get - not least because he sloughs off the confident, self-possessed persona exhibited in his books and allows his vulnerabilities to show
—— Alastair Mabbott , Herald'[a] page turner...a series of profound, and mystifying, stories within a stoy that will confound and delight...Another confirmed bestseller
—— News of the WorldEighteen years on from Generation X, Coupland still satirises pop culture better than anyone. This globe-spanning tale, set in the near future, is masterfully told and often hilarious
—— GQWith this exceptional sequel to Generation X, Douglas Coupland may be one of the smartest, wittiest writers around . . . He is a terrifically good writer . . . Generation A is set in the near future . . . Bees have become extinct, but then five people are stung . . . It is the attempt to get to the bottom of this mystery that brings the five together on an Alaskan island where they are made to tell stories to one another. Coupland weaves common elements across these tales and into the main narrative: large themes . . . comic themes . . . existential themes . . . There is a compelling plot . . . Coupland scatters his smartly satirical observations throughout . . . This is a clever, brilliant book - and it's loads better than Generation X . . . funny and profound . . . Straight A . . . (Coupland) deserves top marks for his latest novel
—— EsquireCoupland is a master at creating eccentric, lonely characters and illuminating the mundaneness of dull lives in our celebrity-obsessed, technology-driven world . . . Ideas bounce of his writing like sparks off a live electrical wire
—— The Scotsman[A] tour-de-force myth of the near future . . . As ever, the writing is sharp and witty, displaying Coupland's keen eye for cultural trends and an awareness of the ever-expanding limits of technological advancement
—— QHighly recommended. Like Murakami in thriller-trope mode. Go for it
—— William Gibson, author of Virtual LightAmbitious and weird . . . genuinely experimental
—— Scotland on SundayUnusual circumstances ensue in this latest read from the brilliant social commentator
—— ElleCoupland is a smart, witty writer . . . A delight
—— London LiteCoupland juggles some fascinating ideas . . . Equal parts humor and revelation...An intelligent look at pop and digital culture
—— Publishers WeeklyFrom the very first pages it jumps out: the language, the preoccupations, the political and technological references, the humour - they're all so now . . . Scintillating . . . I must admit I read the novel enviously. Oh, to have written something so clever, funny, heartfelt and original . . . The narration is layered, there are passages that are very funny, others that are wise, and throughout the language crackles with vitality . . . In the future, if people are curious about what it was like to live in our times, in the early 21st century, they will do well to read Douglas Coupland
—— Yann MartellSuperbly entertaining stuff. Coupland's dialogue is witty and spiky and makes you laugh out loud . . . Coupland just can't resist making his characters as smart as he is, which is very smart indeed. He's one of the few writers who has really grasped what different times we live in . . . But Coupland's personality as a writer isn't just smart, it is also charming humane and fundamentally optimistic. A pure pleasure
—— Independent on SundayA delightful Decameron of a book . . . rich, educative and even consoling
—— IndependentOne of the most popular serious writers of our time
—— Aravind Adiga , Financial Times