Teddy Rose Book Reviews Plus More


Mrs. Rossi’s Dream by Khanh HaMrs. Rossi’s Dream by Khanh Ha

Publisher:  The Permanent Press (March 1, 2019)
Category: Historical Fiction, Vietnam, Literary Fiction, Multicultural
Tour dates: Mar-Apr, 2019
ISBN: 978-1579625689
Available in Print and ebook, 312 pages

Mrs. Rossi’s Dream

Description Mrs. Rossi’s Dream by Khanh Ha


“I live in a coastal town in the deep south of the Mekong Delta. During the war this was IV Corps, which saw many savage fights. Although the battles might have long been forgotten, some places cannot forget.”

Thus begins the harrowing yet poignant story of a North Vietnamese communist defector who spends ten years in a far-flung reform prison after the war, and now, in 1987, a free man again, finds work as caretaker at a roadside inn in the U Minh region. One day new guests arrived at the inn: an elderly American woman and her daughter, an eighteen-year-old Vietnamese girl adopted at the age of five from an orphanage in the Mekong Delta before the war ended. Catherine Rossi has come to this region to find the remains of her son, a lieutenant who went missing-in-action during the war.

“Mrs. Rossi’s Dream” tells the stories of two men in time parallel: Giang, the 39-year-old war veteran; Nicola Rossi, a deceased lieutenant in the U.S. army, the voice of a spirit.

From the haunting ugliness of the Vietnam War, the stories of these two men shout, cry and whisper to us the voices of love and loneliness, barbarity and longing, lived and felt by a multitude of people from all walks of life: the tender adolescent vulnerability of a girl toward a man who, as a drifter and a war-hardened man, draws beautifully in his spare time; the test of love and faith endured by a mother whose dogged patience even baffles the local hired hand who thinks the poor old lady must have gone out of her mind; and whose determination drives her into the spooky forest, rain or shine, until one day she claims she has sensed an otherworldly presence in there with her. In the end she wishes to see, just once, a river the local Vietnamese call “The River of White Water Lilies,” the very river her son saw, now that all her hopes to find his remains die out.

Just then something happens. She finds out where he has lain buried for twenty years―and how he was killed.

Excerpt Mrs. Rossi’s Dream by Khanh Ha

I  live in a coastal town in the deep south of the Mekong Delta. During the war this was the territory of IV Corps, which saw many savage fights.

I work at a roadside inn. The owners are a couple in their late sixties. The old woman runs the inn and cooks meals for the guests. I often drive to Ông Doc, twenty kilometers south, to pick up customers when they arrive on buses, boats, or barges. Most of them come to visit the Lower U Minh National Reserve, twenty kilometers north.

I seldom see the old man. He stays mostly holed up in his room. Sometimes when his door isn’t locked, I glimpse him wandering like a specter. He and his wife had a son who served in the Army of the Republic of Vietnam. One morning I looked out the window to see the old man digging near a star fruit tree, a small figure, clad in white pajamas and a black trilby on his head. The grassy ground was dotted with bluebells, and hibiscus bled in mounds on the grass. After digging down a foot or so, he stopped. From the pocket of his pajamas he pulled out a bone. It looked like a wrist bone. He sat on his haunches and placed the bone in the hole and scooped dirt over it. After a while the old woman came out, grabbed him by the arm, and dragged him inside. The next morning, he was out there digging again. The same spot. I could hear the sound of his spade hitting the bone and saw him stop. He picked up the bone, smeared with brown dirt, and dragged his spade to the lemon tree. There were fallen lemons on the ground, deep yellow and wrinkled, and they sank with the fresh loam into the earth. He fretted about the placement of the bone, turning it this and that way.

I had to ask the old woman, and she told me that their son was killed in action somewhere in IV Corps in 1967—exactly twenty years ago. They never found his body.

One afternoon the old woman tells me to drive into town to pick up new guests at the ferry. As I ease their old Peugeot into first gear, the old woman runs out and yells, “Have you seen my husband?”

“No, ma’am.” I let the car idle.

“Can you drive down the road and look for him?”

“He could be anywhere.”

“He went down that way before.” She points toward the town beyond the tree crowns and a patch of pale blue sky.

“I’ll look for him.”

The road is empty and quiet, and I can hear the hoarse cries of storks flying overhead. I know the road well—the houses dotting the road, the dwellers’ faces as they stand in the dark doorways. Alongside the road, hummingbird flowers burst in white, their fruits long and pendulous like green beans.

Ahead I see him walking in his white pajamas. He wears the same trilby pulled down over his eyes, a brown bag clutched in his hand. He looks back nervously.

I pull up and he glances toward me, then looks the other way. I get out and take him by the elbow toward the car. He follows meekly, cradling the brown bag against his chest. The rustle of paper makes me curious. “What do you have in there, sir?”

“Where is a safe place?” he asks in his southern accent.

“For what, sir?”

He opens the top of the bag. Inside is the bone. An ox bone, I see.


Awards Mrs. Rossi’s Dream by Khanh Ha


Parts of the book were previously published in literary magazines and became finalists for the following awards:

2016 Mary McCarthy Prize in Short Fiction (Sarabande Books)

2016 Many Voices Project (New Rivers Press)

2016 Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Fiction (Prairie Schooner)

2015 William Faulkner – William Wisdom Creative Writing Award (Pirate’s Alley Faulkner Society)

A short story adapted from the book won the 2013 Robert Watson Literary Prize in Fiction (The Greensboro Review)

My Thoughts Mrs. Rossi’s Dream by Khanh Ha


This is Khanh Ha’s third novel.  I became a big fan after reading his first book, ‘Flesh’ and my fandom grew with his second book, ‘The Demon Who Peddled Longing.’  How does his third book, ‘Mrs. Rossi’s Dream’ stack up?  Read on.

Catherine Rossi is from the USA and her son, Lieutenant Nicola Rossi fought in the Vietnam War.  He was missing in action and assumed dead. 

20 years later Catherine Rossi and her adopted 18 year old Vietnamese Daughter, Chi Lan show up at an inn in the U Minh region of Vietnam.  They have come to find Nicola’s remains.  There are two main narrators of the story, Giang the caretaker at the inn and war veteran and via letters to his mother, Nicola Rossi.  Both men have harrowing stories from the war and Giang has an added layer of information since he survived.

Khanh Ha has a literary style that is fresh and so nuanced.  He takes a deep dive into his characters and subject.  A Vietnamese American, he was a child in Vietnam when the war broke out. I think this experience adds to his style.  He has a dreamy like quality that most likely comes from being a young child when he lived in Nam.  There are common themes of loneliness, love, longing, compassion, and brutality in his books.  His first two books deal with post war Vietnam, while ‘Mrs. Rossi’s Dream’ during and after the war.

How does ‘Mrs. Rossi’s Dream’ stack up?  For starters, I could not put it down and it kept me up into the wee hours of night!  The characters grabbed me and pulled me into their lives.  Ha has a way of making me forget that I am reading a book. He writing is beautiful even when writing about brutality.  For that reason, I can’t say if it is better than his first two novels, I love them all! I read ‘Flesh’ when it was published in 2012 and ‘The Demon Who Peddled Longing’ in 2014. Yet, it as if I read them both yesterday.  The characters haunt me and I just can’t stop thinking about them.  I am sure that will be the case with ‘Mrs. Rossi’s Dream’ as well.  ‘Mrs. Rossi’s Dream’ is a must read for both literary fiction lovers and readers who enjoy books that take place in Vietnam.  I give it 5 stars!

I received the eBook for my honest review.

About Khanh HaMrs. Rossi’s Dream by Khanh Ha


Award winning author, Khanh Ha is the author of Flesh (Black Heron Press) and The Demon Who Peddled Longing (Underground Voices). He is a seven-time Pushcart nominee, a Best Indie Lit New England nominee, twice a finalist of The William Faulkner-Wisdom Creative Writing Award, and the recipient of Sand Hills Prize for Best Fiction, and Greensboro Review’s Robert Watson Literary Prize in fiction. The Demon Who Peddled Longing was honored by Shelf Unbound as a Notable Indie Book. Ha graduated from Ohio University with a bachelor’s degree in journalism.

Website: http://www.authorkhanhha.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/authorkhanhha
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/authorkhanhha
Pinterest: www.pinterest.com/khanhha

Buy Mrs. Rossi’s Dream by Khanh Ha


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Giveaway Mrs. Rossi’s Dream by Khanh Ha


This giveaway is for the choice 3 print copies or ebook copies of the book , 1 copy per each of 3 winners.  Print is available to Canada and the U.S. only but ebook is available worldwide. This giveaway ends on May 8, 2019 at midnight pacific time.  Entries are accepted via Rafflecopter only.

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Mrs. Rossi’s Dream by Khanh Ha

American Corporate by Jeb Stewart HarrisonAmerican Corporate by Jeb Stewart Harrison

Publisher:  Baby Bingus Books (Nov 27, 2018)
Category: Literary fiction, humor, family life
Tour dates: Apr/May, 2019
ISBN: 978-1986937863
Available in Print and ebook, 258 pages
American Corporate

Description American Corporate by Jeb Stewart Harrison


A playful, big-hearted tragicomedy in the Russo/Irving mold, American Corporate chronicles the misadventures of middle-aged Jack Sullivan and his family as they bounce across the country in search of gainful employment, domestic tranquility, and a few people they can trust.

It is a story that working parents past, present and future will see as part of their own: the triumphs, the tragedies, the innocent mistakes and the not-so-innocent mistakes, and above all the forgiveness that keeps families together to face another challenge.

Praise Healing of Howard Brown by Jeb Stewart Harrison


“If you enjoy beautiful prose, complex themes of family and race, and a refreshingly original narrator, this book is for you. Harrison is among the select few contemporary fiction writers who still write for serious readers.” – Jim Heynen, author, best known for The One Room Schoolhouse , The Boys’ HouseYou Know What is Right , The Man Who Kept Cigars in His Cap and many more.

“This book starts off with a bang and keeps on going. Howard is a character with a specific voice and story. I’m sure you’ll be provoked and entertained.”- Jessica Barksdale Inclan, author of The Believe TrilogyThe Being Trilogy, and many more.

“In The Healing of Howard Brown, author Jeb Stewart Harrison weaves an intriguing contemporary literary. The author provides a wonderful mixture of drama, humor, and seriousness to the story that easily keeps the reader’s interest as Howard’s journey unfolds. I would be remiss if I didn’t mention how much I really enjoyed the author’s rich and vividly descriptive style of writing, especially the wonderful descriptions of the California and Louisiana settings.
The Healing of Howard Brown is a thought-provoking contemporary literary tale that will draw you in, touch your soul, and leave a smile on your face.”- Kathleen Higgins-Anderson, Jersey Girl Book Reviews

“ I’m so happy that I read this book. It is beautifully written, wonderful imagery, and has such a heartwarming story as you follow along with Howard healing from the past. This is a wonderful story and one that I strongly recommend.”- jbronderbookreviews

“Jeb Stewart Harrison’s novel, THE HEALING of HOWARD BROWN brought to mind the novels of Roland Merullo, particularly, BREAKFAST WITH BUDDAH. Along the way, to his childhood home, and hopefully his sister, Howard finds more than expected and what he’s missing in the most unlikely places. The journey allows Howard to meditate on family relationships, issues such as love,life, death, fear and ultimately finding one’s personal peace. We the readers, if open, are able to learn from some of Howard, Mr. Booper and even the author, Jeb’s experiences.”- Cindy Roesel, Cindy Reads and Writes

Interview American Corporate by Jeb Stewart Harrison

TR: What is your favorite scene in the book? Why?

JSH: I think my favorite scenes are the ones I created entirely from my imagination (vs. a fictional extrapolation of events that actually occurred). And I like scenes where one of the characters has a life-changing epiphany that suggests the presence of divine forces in the universe. This happens to Jack Sullivan as he returns to his house over snow packed roads in the Connecticut woods from the hospital and hits a deer. Assuming that the doe is dying, Sullivan literally barks with grief (he sent his wife to the hospital after she fell from the rickety deck of his tree fort and is thought to be paralyzed) at the notion that he’s mortally injured two mothers: his wife, and the doe. But when the doe jumps up at the sound of his grievous wail, then runs into the woods with her babies, Sullivan has a palpable sense of divine intervention in his life, which, of course, changes everything.

TR: I always enjoy looking at the names that authors choose to give their characters. Where do you derive the names of your characters?  Are they based on real people you knew or now know in real life? How do you create names for your characters?

JSH: Interesting question. It’s a bit chicken and egg. Sometimes I think of, or hear, a great name, and create a character that looks and acts like the name sounds. It was easy to name the characters in American Corporate because most of them are based on real people. In contrast, I chose the name of Howard Brown for the protagonist in The Healing of Howard Brown because of the alliteration of the “ow” sound, and because in my mind, a guy named Howard Brown would be a bit of a big, uncoordinated oaf. Same with Hack – Henry Griffin’s nickname reflects his own negative self-image while at the same time begging the question, “Is he really such a hack?”

TR: Which actor/actress would you like to see playing the lead character from your most recent book?

JSH: George Clooney (the comic version) would make an awesome Jack Sullivan.

TR: How long did it take you to write this book from concept to fruition?

JSH: 18 years

TR: Tell us about your cover. Did you design it yourself?

JSH: I came up with the concept. My daughter created the artwork.

TR: What writers have you drawn inspiration from?

JSH: John Irving, Richard Russo, Saul Bellow, Ernest Hemingway, Charles Dickens, Richard Ford, Jim Harrison, Denis Johnso

TR: You are sitting in a coffee shop. What does your writer mind see?

JSH: After taking in the environment – the smells, the sounds, the people – I am apt to imagine a “what-if” scenario playing out i.e. what if a herd of bighorn sheep came in, bleating and farting? What if the herder was one of Satan’s minions? What does the little girl in the polka dotted yoga pants do when a bighorn sheep eats her donut? Is the barista packing?

TR: What are you currently working on?

JSH: I have several novels in various stages of discombobulation. Chasing Byron, a magical realism novel about racism, justice, mental illness and golf, set in Louisiana at the end of WWII, is closest to completion.


About Jeb Stewart HarrisonAmerican Corporate by Jeb Stewart Harrison


Award winning author, Jeb Stewart Harrison is a freelance writer, songwriter, musician and painter in San Rafael, California. After many years as an ad agency copywriter, writer/producer, creative director, and director of marketing communications, Jeb now writes fiction and creative non-fiction, along with commercial works for hire. Jeb’s debut novel, Hack, was published by Harper Davis Publishers in August 2012. In 2015 he received his MFA from Pacific Lutheran University at the tender age of 60. His second novel, The Healing of Howard Brown, won the 2017 Independent Press Award for literary fiction. His third novel, American Corporate, was published in November, 2018.

He also records and plays electric bass guitar with the popular instrumental combo The Treble Makers, as well as Bay Area favorites Call Me Bwana. Jeb was born and raised in Kentfield, California, and has lived in Boulder, CO; Missoula, MT; Hollywood, CA; Scottsdale, AZ; Indianapolis, IN; Ridgefield, CT and Stinson Beach, CA.

Website: https://www.jsh-creative.com/writing/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jebstewartharrison
Twitter: https://twitter.com/BabyBingus
Twitter: https://twitter.com/JebdeLimboman
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/jebhop/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jshcreativeinc/

Buy American Corporate by Jeb Stewart Harrison


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Giveaway American Corporate by Jeb Stewart Harrison


This giveaway is for the choice 3 print copies or ebook copies of the book , 1 copy per each of 3 winners.  Print is available to Canada and the U.S. only but ebook is available worldwide. This giveaway ends on May 31, 2019 at midnight pacific time.  Entries are accepted via Rafflecopter only.

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American Corporate by Jeb Stewart Harrison

From An-Other Land: Making Home in the Land of Dreams by Tanushree GhoshFrom An-Other Land: Making Home in the Land of Dreams by Tanushree Ghosh

Publisher: Readomania Publishin (December 4, 2018)
Category: Adult Fiction, 224 pages
Genre: Short Stories, Immigrant Stories, Literary

Description From An-Other Land: Making Home in the Land of Dreams by Tanushree Ghosh


Never has been the conversation on immigration more pertinent than now, post 2016 US elections. From cancellation of refugee protection and zero tolerance to undercurrent crackdown on H visas to the border wall – the resurgence of nationalism is hitting the globalized population head-on.

But what is immigration today? A question of life or death – fleeing of persecution? A compulsion? Or a mere pursuance of privilege? And what is the US today? A land of opportunities? Or a quagmire impossible to comprehend, inherently racist and selfish?

From An-Other Land dives deep into immigration today for the diaspora and its many facets with characters who seek to define themselves in an intercultural setting that is less and less sure of itself. A reality check and a guide for anyone who wants to understand the modern-day US.

To read others reviews, please follow Tanushree Ghosh’s page on iRead Book Tours.

My Thoughts From An-Other Land: Making Home in the Land of Dreams by Tanushree Ghosh


I found the book description a bit misleading.  With the exception of one word, “Characters” the description leads one to believe this book is non-fiction and a real examination of the issues.  Of course, a book of fiction can certainly address real issues however, for myself, it did not address all of the issues mentioned in the description.

From An-Other Land is a book of short stories about the immigrant experience.  Tanushree Ghosh does a good job capturing each characters immigrant experience in most of the stories.  A couple of the stories fall a little short for me and I would have liked to have been able to delve in deeper into their experiences. The stories are loosely interlinked by the characters. I believe this is Ms. Ghosh’s first book and a I think she shows promise as a writer.  I look forward to seeing what she writes next.  This book was a worthwhile read. I give it 3.5 stars out of 5.


About Tanushree GhoshFrom An-Other Land: Making Home in the Land of Dreams by Tanushree Ghosh

Tanushree Ghosh works in Tech and has a Doctorate in Chemistry from the Cornell University. She is also a social activist and writer. Her blog posts, op-eds, poems, and stories are an effort to provoke thoughts, especially towards issues concerning women and social justice.

She is a contributor (past and present) to several popular e-zines (incl. The Huffington Post US, The Logical Indian, Youth Ki Awaaz, Tribune India, Women’s Web, and Cafe Dissensus). Her literary resume includes poems and stories featured in national and international magazines (Words Pauses and Noises, UK; TUCK, Glimmer Train Honorable mention) as well as inclusion in seven anthologies such as Defiant Dreams (Oprah 2016 reading list placeholder) and The Best Asian Short Stories 2017 (published out of Singapore by Kitaab). Her first single-author book, From An-Other Land, is on immigration.

She has held different leadership roles in non-profits (ASHA and AID India) and is the founder and director of Her Rights (www.herrights.website), a 501(3) c non-profit committed to furthering the cause of gender equality. She is often an invited speaker or panelist for both corporate and non-profit endeavors.

Connect with the author: Website ~ Twitter ~ Facebook


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