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Goodbye vitamin by rachel khong
Goodbye vitamin by rachel khong







goodbye vitamin by rachel khong

She just suffered a breakup and the emotional toll it is taking on her person is almost more than she can handle. She is approaching her thirties and she isn’t in the best place mentally. Ruth is a weary woman when readers first meet her. And she wouldn’t enjoy the process of researching such a character. The Asian author would never write about an aging white man living in Canada because she cannot put herself in the shoes of such a character. More importantly, Rachel likes to write about real people that she knows living in a world that she understands and dealing with problems that make sense to her. This is also the reason why Rachel likes to write about real people living in the real world.

goodbye vitamin by rachel khong

This explains why the author’s characters are sometimes mistaken for autobiographical versions of Rachel Khong. This approach allows Rachel to put herself in the shoes of her characters and to apply some of her personal sensibilities to her characters. Rachel Khong’s fiction is written in the first person. However, she denied the claims that ‘Goodbye, Vitamin’ was in anyway autobiography. Rachel admitted that she had taken some aspects of herself and then exaggerated them somewhat to produce Ruth. In fact, the people that know her initially thought that Ruth, the hero of her first novel, was some version of her. Rachel Khong’s protagonists are largely based on her own personality. She isn’t afraid to delve into the darkest recesses of the mind, revealing those aspects of human nature that can make life so difficult. She writes about real people dealing with real problems.Īnd she never pulls her punches. She isn’t one to delve into epic tales about exaggerated heroes and heroines doing the impossible. And her love for women writers has allowed her to manifest in her work some of the techniques she has stumbled across in books like “Why Did I Ever’.

goodbye vitamin by rachel khong

Rachel Khong enjoys reading the works of authors like Renata Adler and Elizabeth Hardwick. Rachel Khong’s literary efforts have appeared in publications like ‘The San Francisco Chronicle’, ‘Joyland’, and ‘The Believer’. Lucky Peach no longer exists.īut its demise did not stop the author from experimenting with literature. The author first made her mark with the Lucky Peach Magazine, working as an executive editor. Rachel is a pretty accomplished author, having acquired degrees from Yale and the University of Florida. Rachel Khong is a writer and editor responsible for ‘Goodbye, Vitamin’, a novel that took the publishing world by storm in 2017.









Goodbye vitamin by rachel khong