Duong Thu Huong's novel "Blind Paradise" was held in northern Vietnam during the communist revolution of the 1980s and translated into English by Phan Huy Duong and Nina McPherson. In Hung's novel, the time society of traditional Vietnam is depicted as the hero. By constructing a correlation between the changing natural environment and the hang, the author tells the reader the basic information to pursue hope. This correlation shows a microscopic view of family relationship and its impact on the whole generation of Vietnam.
"Blind Paradise" (1991) by Duong Thu Huong is the first novel published in Vietnam published in the United States. Through an explanation of the first person of a young woman named Han, the reader understands the contemporary Vietnamese culture. It is still immersed in ancient traditions and is influenced by the modern history. This book introduces people's appreciation for life, dedication to work, political ideology and family duties. This novel also contains ambiguities and complex emotions of the hero. This title calls the hometown of Vietnam "paradise", and at the same time call traditional residents who are not questioned "blind" to capture this ambiguity. In addition to pain and struggle, this novel is full of precious moments of beauty or joy, whether it is the moment of love, the taste of traditional food, the vision of natural beauty or the sound of music . In the 1980s land was somewhere in our country. "
"Blind Paradise" by Vietnamese novelist Duong Thu Huong was first published in Vietnam in 1988 and translated into English in 1993. This is the first novel that has been published in the U.S in the United States and provides American readers with true insight into poverty and politics. From the 1950s to the 1980s, the communist government was characterized by corruption in Vietnam. For most Americans, the name Vietnam is reminiscent of the image of the Vietnam War, but this novel does not concern the so-called American Vietnam War. It began in Russia in the 1980s. Because a young Vietnamese lady, Hang, went to Moscow to visit her uncle. While she was traveling, she recalled childhood and adolescent events in Hanoi and portrayed the lives of communists in the mother village during the miserable land reform plan in the mid-1950s.