Danang Book Club attracts eager readers

Happy readers at a recent meeting of the Da Nang Book Club
Happy readers get together at a recent meeting of the Da Nang Book Club (photo: Da Nang Book Club/Meetup)

DA NANG, VIETNAM – This week Melanie and I attended a meeting of our local book club, where we discussed the works of Haruki Murakami, a Japanese author who has penned several novels and collections of short stories. His works have been translated into 50 languages and have sold millions of copies around the world.

The book group gets together about once a month to discuss a specific title, author, writing genre or topic. Past reading themes have included science fiction and fantasy, short stories by Vietnamese authors, spiritual books, great writers in 1920s Paris, humor and more.

Fellow readers bring a wide range of experience

Attendance varies from one meeting to the next, but there are always people from a variety of backgrounds and experience… young people teaching English and other subjects at local private schools, expats working remotely as they wander the world, retirees like Melanie and myself, and local Vietnamese citizens looking to expand their horizons beyond the borders of their homeland.

This past week’s group included expats from Australia and America, as well as a handful of Vietnamese from around the country, and ranged in age from early 20s to nearly 70 years old.

As always, the monthly book, author or genre is the starting point for our discussions, which can often be quite lively as everyone weighs in with their opinions.

It’s OK if you haven’t read the current book

Reading the current selection is not necessarily a requirement for attendance at the gatherings. In fact, it’s often the case that as many as half (or more) of the attendees have not read the book being discussed.

All that’s really required is a willingness to connect with other people and express honest opinions about whatever the discussion brings.

Our conversations always range far and wide from the initial beginning, veering off into personal experience, expat life, cultural differences and more.

Among the most valuable takeaways from our meetings are the recommendations from attendees of other books and topics to check out.

Coming as we do from such diverse backgrounds, it’s literally like tapping into a vast window on the world of literature.

Join us at the next meeting for lively conversation

Learn about the next Danang Book Club meeting on Facebook or on Meetup.

You named your store what? Another quirky biz name

Another curious example from our growing collection of quirky business names
Another curious example from our growing collection of quirky business names

DANANG, VIETNAM – Here’s another one of the curious business names we’ve run across in our travels outside the U.S.

We’ve seen a lot of business names that make us stop and wonder, “What were they thinking?”

Sometimes the odd names are the result of faulty online translation engines.

Other times they come from an effort to sound “Western” and hip…

Or a grandiose way to blow your own horn.

And sometimes they’re just odd.

Take a look at the shop pictured above…

“C+ mini Mart”

If you were going to assign your own grade, wouldn’t you give yourself an “A”?

Maybe even an “A+” if you were feeling really good about your efforts.

I certainly would!

But a “C+”?

That’s all they could muster?

Top of the class or not, at least it’s above average.

Since when did we become Rock Stars?

The Vietnamese seem to think we're rock stars (Michael Bolli/pixabay.com)
The Vietnamese seem to think we’re rock stars (Michael Bolli/pixabay.com)

HANOI, VIETNAM – Melanie and I have noticed something funny happening since we moved to Vietnam. We’ll be out and about, minding our own business, exploring a historic site or wandering around at a festival. All of sudden a young person or two – sometimes not so young – will come up and ask to pose with us for a photo. It’s weird.
Continue reading “Since when did we become Rock Stars?”

In America it’s baseball. In Vietnam, construction?

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DANANG, VIETNAM – One thing we’ve seen again and again as we’ve traveled around Vietnam is a lot of construction. In Hanoi it seemed like there was a new building going up (or an old one coming down) on almost every block.

We saw the same thing on the Mekong Delta and up in the mountainous Sapa region. Even on Cat Ba Island in Lan Ha Bay, there was new construction galore.
Continue reading “In America it’s baseball. In Vietnam, construction?”