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People from Bloomington Kindle Edition

3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars 23 ratings

Winner of the 2023 PEN Translation Prize

Winner of the 2023 NSW Premier’s Translation Prize

An eerie, alienating, yet comic and profoundly sympathetic short story collection about Americans in America by one of Indonesia’s most prominent writers, now in an English translation for its fortieth anniversary, with a foreword by Intan Paramaditha

A Penguin Classic


In these seven stories of
People from Bloomington,our peculiar narrators find themselves in the most peculiar of circumstances and encounter the most peculiar of people. Set in Bloomington, Indiana, where the author lived as a graduate student in the 1970s, this is far from the idyllic portrait of small-town America. Rather, sectioned into apartment units and rented rooms, and gridded by long empty streets and distances traversable only by car, it’s a place where the solitary can all too easily remain solitary; where people can at once be obsessively curious about others, yet fail to form genuine connections with anyone. The characters feel their loneliness acutely and yet deliberately estrange others. Budi Darma paints a realist world portrayed through an absurdist frame, morbid and funny at the same time.

For decades, Budi Darma has influenced and inspired many writers, artists, filmmakers, and readers in Indonesia, yet his stories transcend time and place. With
The People from Bloomington, Budi Darma draws us to a universality recognized by readers around the world—the cruelty of life and the difficulties that people face in relating to one another while negotiating their own identities. The stories are not about “strangeness” in the sense of culture, race, and nationality. Instead, they are a statement about how everyone, regardless of nationality or race, is strange, and subject to the same tortures, suspicions, yearnings, and peculiarities of the mind.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

“First published in Indonesia 40 years ago, this story collection from celebrated author Darma gets a second life—and an English translation—as a Penguin Classic. Across seven stories set in the gridded streets and rented rooms of Bloomington, Ind., Darma’s characters navigate their morbidly funny lives in this meditation on alienation, failed connection, and the universal strangeness of the human mind.”
The Millions

“Despite his assertion that that the characters from People from Bloomington could have been drawn from any place in the world, Darma perceived, as an outsider, an emerging attitude towards the recluses on the edges of an ordinary Midwestern city. People from Bloomington feels like a report from the early days of the great American unwinding of civic responsibility and sense of interconnectedness. His characters are unsettling because they are recognizable—if not in our communities, then in ourselves. Darma doesn’t let us look away.”
—David Kobe, The Rumpus

About the Author

Budi Darma was a novelist, short-story-writer, and literary critic. Budi Darma received several national literary awards and his international honors include the Southeast Asian Writers Award (or S.E.A. Write Award) and the Mastera Literary Award. He held a PhD in English literature from the University of Bloomington, Indiana, and was a professor at the State University of Surabaya.

Tiffany Tsao (translator and introducer) is a literary translator and writer. Her translations have been awarded the PEN Presents and PEN Translates prizes. She has translated numerous Indonesian works, has written about literature in translation for Electric Literature, and is the author of The Majesties (2020) and the Oddfits series. She holds a PhD in English literature from UC-Berkeley.

Intan Paramaditha (foreword author) is an Indonesian author and a lecturer in media and film studies at Macquarie University, Sydney. She is the author of the short story collection Apple and Knife. Her debut novel Gentayangan (The Wandering), selected as Tempo Best Literary Work for Prose Fiction in 2017, received the PEN Translates Award from English PEN and the PEN/ Heim Translation Fund Grant from PEN America.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B09988JYG9
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Penguin Classics (April 12, 2022)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ April 12, 2022
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 1414 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 204 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars 23 ratings

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Customer reviews

3.9 out of 5 stars
3.9 out of 5
23 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on November 29, 2023
If you like Haruki Murakami you will probably like this book, as it shares his emphasis on not-quite-surreal unusual incidents, and is written from the same languid, privileged perspective. I do not like Haruki Murakami but I still enjoyed a few of the stories.

"The Old Man With No Name", which is excerpted on Amazon's details page, spoke to some deep aspects of suburban American life, and "Mrs. Elberhart" sold me on how suburban Bloomington made the author think about civilization, safety, life and death. "Yorrick" is a bizarre story which is more Indonesian than American, and it is vaguely amusing to see the suburban white characters act Indonesian. These three stories are not super compelling, but are at least well-written and interesting. Other people may enjoy them more than me.

"The Family M" is a cruel story about a narrator making elaborate plans to make his impoverished neighbors suffer. "Charles Lebourne" is memorable in how badly written it is -- the plotline is still Murakami-esque, but the writing resembles an undergraduate project. I cannot remember the other two stories even though I just read them yesterday.
Reviewed in the United States on May 10, 2022
The translation is so mediocre that it did not justify the voice of Budi Darma in the original Indonesian.
Reviewed in the United States on April 17, 2022
Reading this book was a lot like reading high schoolers' creative writing efforts.
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