A Chant to Soothe Wild Elephants
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Overview
Six years ago at the age of twenty-one, Jaed Muncharoen Coffin, a half-Thai American man, left New England's privileged Middlebury College to be ordained as a Buddhist monk in his mother's native village of Panomsarakram—thus fulfilling a familial obligation. While addressing the notions of displacement, ethnic identity, and cultural belonging, A Chant to Soothe Wild Elephants chronicles his time at the temple that rain season—receiving alms in the streets in saffron robes; bathing in the canals; learning to meditate in a mountaintop hut; and falling in love with Lek, a beautiful Thai woman who comes to represent the life he can have if he stays. Part armchair travel, part coming-of-age story, this debut work transcends the memoir genre and ushers in a brave new voice in American nonfiction.
Synopsis
A simple story of a rain season in Thailand and a young man at the intersection of two cultures
Magill Book Reviews
Coffin prefers to show rather than tell, to understate rather than over determine. He writes with a deft hand, creating crystalline images and lovely prose, as he attempts to traverse the cultural abyss between his world in the United States and the world of his beloved grandfather.
Editorials
Body + Soul Editor's Picks
This mix of coming of age, falling in love, and culture shock is told in a direct, delicate, and moving style.Brunswick Times Record
[Coffin] has a remarkable ability to render both the details of the external landscape and the complexities of his own internal architecture with clarity, compassion, and honesty. It is this honesty, which often manifests as self-effacing humor and willingness to call into question his own motivations, that gives Coffin's book much of its emotional depth and resonance.Coffin conveys the texture of these experiences with vividness and a keen eye for detail.And he conveys the stages of his growing realization that he does not fully belong to the culture he has sought to join with such high hopes in clear, direct prose.Cleveland Plain Dealer
[A] gentle, engaging memoir.Jay Parini
A Chant to Soothe Wild Elephants has the kind of hard, shimmering, simple prose that set Hemingway apart as a writer to watch in his first book of stories. Jaed Coffin is not only a writer to watch, however. As he demonstrates in this lively memoir, he's a writer who has already achieved that rare thing: a singular voice, and one that satisfies the ear with its quiet music, that feeds the eye with image after image of life. (Jay Parini, author of Robert Frost: A Life)Julia Alvarez
Jaed Coffin takes us on the eternal quest which Joseph Campbell described as the journey of the hero in search of enlightenment. But A Chant to Soothe Wild Elephants is also a touching memoir of growing up in dual cultures with a foot in both First and Third Worlds. Coffin takes us inside those worlds and on that quest with such honesty, skill, humor, and intimacy that we can't help but follow. A rare look into a culture from an insider/outsider's point of view. (Julia Alvarez, author of How the Garcia Girls Lost Their Accents)Los Angeles Times Book Review
A simple story.Well worth the journey.Magill Book Reviews
Coffin prefers to show rather than tell, to understate rather than over determine. He writes with a deft hand, creating crystalline images and lovely prose, as he attempts to traverse the cultural abyss between his world in the United States and the world of his beloved grandfather.PopMatters.com
A Chant to Soothe Wild Elephants shows where a journey of the mind, body, and spirit can take you, and how a search for answers can end, successfully, with acceptance of ambivalence and peace with the unknown.Coffin writes in short, crisp, often powerful sentences, much like his literary idols Jack London and Ernest Hemmingway. The style matches the monk way of life-quiet, simple, clean. There is no flowery language or effusive descriptions, and Coffin's prose never veers from its single-minded focus on his cultural identity quest.You will thoroughly enjoy this well-crafted, carefully-told story.Shambala Sun
This coming-of-age story.is a chronicle of quiet restlessness and cultural angst.Coffin's hard-won self-awareness never comes across as self-important, and he describes his inner life with a spare, precise honesty that is refreshing. Like the best memoirs, A Chant to Soothe Wild Elephants uncovers more questions than it answers.Publishers Weekly
In this affecting memoir, Coffin relates tales from his childhood and the complications that arise from being the offspring of an interracial couple in the late 1970s. Coffin's father was a U.S. soldier who met his mother in Taiwan during the Vietnam War. Not long after they venture to America to start a new life, Coffin's parents separated and he and his younger sister, Tahnthawan, moved to Maine with their mother. Coffin was taken back to his mother's Taiwanese village several times during his childhood, and, on one occasion, encountered an elderly Buddhist priest who claimed the boy should come and live as a monk. Years later as a university student, he returned to the village to become a monk in the hopes of finding himself and his true identity. He meditated and learned prayers and chants, but often found himself alone in his room, sleeping on the floor next to his Buddha statue until he begins to question whether he is meant for the life of a monk. In heartfelt prose, Coffin beautifully captures his journey, both geographical and internal. (Feb.)
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