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Bright Quang
Bright Quang, Business Licensed # 46090 by Redwood City, CA 9406 at Bright Quang (2012-present)
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Man of Suffering Shares His Light with the World
November 11, 2019 | bright Quang | Edit
Man of Suffering Shares His Light with the World
Two New Books Reveal One Man’s True Experiences as Immigrant, Artist and Political prisoner
Redwood City,
California- Those who dare to take a stand and act on their beliefs
often find themselves in a lonely place, subjected to ridicule and
persecution. Bright has traveled that road for most of his life, from
his war-torn homeland of Vietnam to the shores of America. He shares his
remarkable story and unique views on life in two books: Road to the
United States Part I and Part 2 (both available through Authorhouse).
“I
have forgiven others often, but I have never forgiven myself,” writes
Quang. His books chronicle more than 50 years of hardships suffered as a
result of war and hated of others. At the same time, they deliver
thought-provoking ideological views and predictions of a future America
that Quang has gathered from his observations of political, economic and
sociological factors in a rapidly changing world.
Quang
relates his early education and artistic training, and mixed with these
anecdotes are horrifying accounts of his family’s brush with communist
spies and his own experience as a political prisoner. After living in
Saigon in the 1980 s, Quang “inched toward escape,” eventually making
his way to the United States. Along the way, he recorded his
observations and distilled these into stories and poetry.
The
concluding chapters of this two-part series address his decision to
come to the United States and the opportunities and future struggles he
faced. Quang also includes and analysis of many facets of American life
and predictions for the fate of the country.
Historical
background, social and political analysis and guidelines on how to live
a virtuous life all await readers’ discovery in two intriguing books:
Road to the Unites States part I and Part 2.
Bright
Quang is the pen name for Nguyen Xuan Quang. Born in Quang Ngai City,
Vietnam, he immigrated to America in 1993 under the Humanitarian
Operation program. He graduated from Hue College of Arts in Hue City,
Vietnam, and later, from the University of Police in Saigon. He earned
an associate’s degree in art at Canada College in Redwood City,
Calif., and a bachelor’s degree from California State University in
Hayward. An award-winning poet and artist, he has exhibited in galleries
throughout the United States. He has previously published books in both
English and Vietnamese, and the titles include Poetry & Art, My
Innermost Song, Dinosaur Love and My Torch (available through
AuthorHouse). Quang currently lives in Redwood City.
AuthorHouse
is the premier publishing house for emerging authors and new voices in
literature. For more information, please visit search.
Kelly Rockhill, Press Release Specialist.
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Authorhouse
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Bloomington, IN 47403
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Fax: (812)961-3133
Elizabeth H. House reviewed books
Road
to United States of America chronicles moments of his experience,
combining personal anecdotes with an investigation of patriotism as a
concept. Following his idea of “ three ways of learning: seeing much,
suffering much, and studying much,” Bright Quang recounts his
impressions of range of positions, from “a lieutenant of South Vietnam
government and a Vietnamese artist” to a student at California State
University. Along the way Bright Quang draws upon an understanding of
political, economic, and sociological factors that may have underscored
roughly the latter half of the twentieth century and beyond.
In
1959, Bright graduated elementary school and quickly transferred to
high school in Quang Ngai City, typically walking about fifteen miles
each way until his brother donated his bike to Bright. A degree of
turmoil emerging in Vietnam begins to touch Bright Quang’s family and
one night during dinner his father tells about “a network of the
Vietnamese Communist spies.” “His relationship with Perfume
and his educational goal.” Stood in jeopardy of being “interrupted by
the unreasonable war.” Bright decided to transfer to Hue College of Arts
to study in art. Along the way Bright met Mercury, who offered to share
room, to her rental.
In
1973, the American and Korean soldiers gathered all of the villagers
living in the Communist military supervision, including Bright’s mother,
relatives and friends, sending them to the free area of South Vietnam.
As the work progresses, Bright relates a series of encounters, some of
which test his level of resolve in one-way or another. At one point
while Bright was leaving the war zone, went hiking in the mountains and
encountered an infantry Division of the new Vietnamese revolution…and
the vanguard company arrested Bright. Bright met their leader and told
him, “I now am seeking freedom because I could not live together with
the cruel Vietnamese Communist government which was an unjust cause.” He
apparently aided Bright to seek the sail of refuge, providing a boat
and he said, “Before your face is Malaysia, on your right is Thailand,
and left is Singapore.”
In
1980, Bright lived in Saigon for a time, worked as a sculptor. As
Bright inched toward escape, reviewed public opinion, often filtered his
responses into his poems and stories.
The
concluding chapters of his “Road to the United States of America”
describe his decision to leave Vietnam in 1993, largely spurred by a
goal “to gain freedom of speech, thoughts, and to recapture a dream.”
Later Bright analyzes various facets of American society, from morality
to factors that may have underscored participation in the World War II.
As a Vietnamese sculptor, poet, and ex-political prisoner of conscience,
Bright provides a potentially and often-candid glimpse at the concept
of America. Overall his offering is designed to communicate points of
his own journey as express an interest in a related topic.
“My Torch” presents a collection of thoughts exploring the layers of emotion sometimes defining the human condition,
particularly in regard to what many be viewed as difficult
circumstances. Having “saved” your work by apparently burying it during a
“six-year concentration camp incarnation,” You consider the people and
ideas that may have influenced your “my perspective in one way or
another. Along the way you highlight qualities relating to identity,
belief, and love in various forms.
Several
selections incorporate a spiritual approach. For example, I Love
Sunlight,” “A Gull’s Friend,” and “The Helpless Life” refer to elements
of nature as if to place the individual within a relatively broader
context of being. Other entries such a “The Fire of Love” and A Night of
Love-sickness” delve into the feeling usually associated with romance.
Turning to slightly more public matters, “A Homeless Child” and Dreaming
of Peace” draw upon personal notions of social responsibility,
patriotism, and democracy. Aspects of your experience inform much of the
text, with pieces including,” Saigon at Night, “My Countrymen,” and Ten
years of Tribulation,” suggesting how a person’s sense of self might
occur as a function of place, vocation, or human interaction. Later,
“I’m a Sculptor” hinges on a similar theme:
In Heaven’s own light the sculptor shone
I catch that angle vision.
Sculptor of life is I, as I stand
With my life uncovers before me
Waiting for the hour when, at God’s command
My life dreams passed over me…

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