Ocean Vuong

Writer

Birthday October 14, 1988

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Hồ Chí Minh City, Vietnam

Age 35 years old

Nationality United States

#20919 Most Popular

1988

Ocean Vuong (born Vương Quốc Vinh, ; October 14, 1988) is a Vietnamese American poet, essayist, and novelist.

2011

His first chapbook, Burnings (Sibling Rivalry Press), was a 2011 "Over The Rainbow" selection for notable books on non-heterosexuality by the American Library Association.

2013

His second chapbook, No (YesYes Books), was released in 2013.

2014

Vuong is a recipient of the 2014 Ruth Lilly/Sargent Rosenberg fellowship from the Poetry Foundation, a 2016 Whiting Award, and the 2017 T. S. Eliot Prize for his poetry.

The project, which compiles original works by writers each year from 2014 to 2114, will remain unread until the collected 100 works are eventually published in 2114.

Discussing his contribution to the project, Vuong opined that, "So much of publishing is about seeing your name in the world, but this is the opposite, putting the future ghost of you forward. You and I will have to die in order for us to get these texts. That is a heady thing to write towards, so I will sit with it a while."

Vuong has stated his view of fiction as a moral vehicle.

Discussing On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous, he said: "Fiction is strongest when it launches a moral question. When it goes out and seeks to answer. The questions that we couldn’t ask in life because the costs would be too much. Fiction and narrative art give us a vicarious opportunity to see these questions play out, at no true cost to our own."

2016

His debut full-length collection, Night Sky with Exit Wounds, was released by Copper Canyon Press in 2016.

2019

His debut novel, On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous, was published in 2019.

He received a MacArthur Grant the same year.

Vuong was born in Hồ Chí Minh City, Vietnam.

His grandmother grew up in the Vietnamese countryside, and his grandfather was a white American Navy soldier, originally from Michigan.

His grandparents met during the Vietnam War, married, and had three children, including Vuong's mother.

His grandfather had gone back to visit home in the U.S. but was unable to return when Saigon fell to communist forces.

His grandmother separated his mother and aunts in orphanages, concerned for their survival.

They fled Vietnam after a police officer came to suspect that his mother was of mixed heritage, leaving her prone to discrimination by the regime's labour policies at the time.

Two-year-old Vuong and his family eventually arrived in a refugee camp in the Philippines before achieving asylum and migrating to the United States, settling in Hartford, Connecticut, alongside six relatives.

His father abandoned the family after this.

Vuong was reunited with his paternal grandfather later in life.

Vuong, who suspects dyslexia runs in his family, was the first in his family to learn to read, at the age of eleven.

At 15 years old, Vuong worked on a tobacco farm illegally and would later describe his experiences on the farm in On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous.

Vuong attended Glastonbury High School in Glastonbury, Connecticut, a school known for academic excellence.

"I didn’t know how to make use of it," Vuong has stated, noting that his grade point average at one point was 1.7.

While in high school, he told fellow Glastonbury graduate Kat Chow he "understood he had to leave Connecticut."

After spending some time at Manchester Community College, Vuong headed to Pace University in New York to study marketing.

His time there lasted only a few weeks before he understood it "wasn’t for him."

He then enrolled at Brooklyn College of the City University of New York, where he studied 19th-century English literature under poet and novelist Ben Lerner, and received his B.A. in English.

He received his M.F.A. in poetry from New York University.

Vuong's poems and essays have been published in various journals, including Poetry, The Nation, TriQuarterly, Guernica, The Rumpus, Boston Review, Narrative Magazine, The New Republic, The New Yorker, and The New York Times.

His first novel, On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous, was published by Penguin Press on June 4, 2019.

While working on the novel, the biggest issue Vuong had was with grammatical tense, since there are no past participles in Vietnamese.

Vuong also regarded the book as a "phantom novel" dedicated to the "phantom readership of the mother, of [his] family," who are illiterate and thus cannot read his book.

Vuong’s mother was diagnosed with breast cancer three months before the publication of On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous.

After his mother died in 2019, Vuong began writing his second collection of poetry, Time is a Mother, which has been described as a “search for life after the death of his mother."

He served as the 2019-2020 Artist-In-Resident at NYU's Asian/Pacific/American Institute, also working with the school's Center for Refugee Poetics and the Lillian Vernon Creative Writers House.

In 2022, he became a tenured Professor of Creative Writing at NYU, and has also taught in the MFA Program for Poets and Writers at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

In 2022, Vuong was named as one of "32 Essential Asian American Writers" by Buzzfeed Books.

Vuong has described himself as being raised by women.

2020

In August 2020, Vuong was revealed as the seventh writer to contribute to the Future Library project.