Thanhh Li Presented by Fran Kyrtatas Children are
Thanhhà Lại Presented by Fran Kyrtatas Children are naturally curious, and if left on their own without prescribed adult prejudices, they’ll do fine by each other. After all, what can be better than uncovering a pure, unspoiled mystery? -Thanhhà Lại
First, you need to know how to pronounce her name! Click below to find out, and to learn a little bit about the story and meaning behind it. THANHHA LAI
About Thanhhà Lại… v She fled Vietnam with her family on a navy ship when she was just ten years old, and her father was captured by the Viet Cong. v She had to acclimate to her new life in Montgomery, Alabama, where she struggled with a new language and culture. v She graduated from the University of Texas and wrote for an Orange County California Paper, The Register. v It took her 15 years to finish the book that would eventually become Inside Out and Back Again. v She currently lives in New York with her family and teaches writing at Parsons: The New School for Design.
Thanhhà Lại is best known for her free verse novel, Inside Out and Back Again, which is semiautobiographical. This beautifully told story takes the reader from Vietnam to Alabama in 1975. Just as Saigon falls to the communists, ten year old Hà and her family flee Vietnam by navy ship. After weeks at sea, with little food and water, they end up in a refugee camp in Guam, and then Florida, before settling in Alabama with a sponsor. Ha and her family must adjust to a very new world where she struggles to learn English and fit in, and where no one else looks like her. She also must accept that her father will not be coming home.
Just a few awards… • National Book Award for Young People's Literature, 2011 • Newbery Honor, 2012 • Jane Addams Children's Book Award Honor for Older Children, 2012 • ALA Notable Children 's Book 2012, Middle; • Booklist 2011 Editors' Choice, Books for Youth, Fiction, Middle Reader • Kirkus Reviews Best Children's Books of 2011 • Publishers Weekly Best Children's Books 2011, Fiction • SLJ Best Books of 2011, Fiction • Booklist Lasting Connections of 2012, Social Studies • Notable Children's Book in the English Language Arts, 2012 • CCBC Choices, 2012 • Notable Social Studies Trade Books for Young People 2012, World History & Culture
Inside Out and Back Again v Is a fantastic middle grade novel, and can work for 4 th-8 th graders. v Younger students will need assistance with pronunciations of names and places, and all students will need background information about the Vietnam War. v Would be terrific as a teacher read aloud, whole class novel study, literature circle, or book club. v Can be paired with a Social Studies curriculum or character building lessons.
Why does Thanhhà Lại’s work belong in every library? • Her books promote global awareness. • 58, 000 Americans were killed in the Vietnam War, and more than 3 million lives were lost; we should not forget. • Bullying and xenophobia are important issues that are brought to the forefront. • It is vital that our children are taught to have empathy for others. • We continue to have refugees coming into our country, from many parts of the world; the issue continues to be very relevant. • She gives us all another reason to LOVE poetry! She points to her chest: Mi. SSS SScott, saying it three times, each louder with even more spit. I repeat, Mi. SSS Sscott, careful to hiss every s. She doesn’t seem impressed. I tap my own chest: Hà. She must have heard Ha, as in funny ha-ha-ha. She fakes a laugh. I repeat, Hà, and wish I knew enough English to tell her to listen for the diacritical mark, this one directing the tone downward. My new teacher tilts her head back, fakes an even sadder laugh. p. 140 Inside Out and Back Again
Wishes I keep to myself: One of my favorite passages: Wish I could do what boys do Birthday Wishes and let the sun darken my skin, and scars grid my knees. We learn a lot about Hà in this repeated poem. Wish I could let my hair grow, but Mother says the shorter the better It is honest, innocent, and sad all at the same time. Hà’s father has been missing since she was a baby. to beat Saigon’s heat and lice. Wish I could lose my chubby cheeks. Wish I could stay calm no matter what my brothers say. Wish Mother would stop chiding me to stay calm, which makes it worse. Wish I had a sister to jump rope with and sew doll clothes and hug for warmth in the middle of the night. Wish father could come home so I can stop daydreaming that he will appear in my classroom in a white navy uniform and extend his hand toward me for all my classmates to see. Mostly I wish Father would appear in our doorway and make Mother’s lips curl upward, lifting them from a permanent frown of worries. p. 30 Inside Out and Back Again
Thanhha Lai’s Second Novel takes us back to Vietnam, when 12 year old Vietnamese. American Mia (Mai) travels with her grandmother, to find out the truth about the grandfather she never met, who went missing during the war. Vietnam is the last place Mia wants to spend her summer, when she could be surfing with her friends in California. She finds out that there is a lot more to this noisy country, full of strange foods, traffic, and fast-talking relatives. • New York Times bestseller • New York Times Review Notable Book • Publishers Weekly Best Book of the Year • NPR's Best Books of 2015
Listen, Slowly is “I won’t learn Vietnamese. ” A sigh. “Then be mute. ” not written in verse, but is a realistic fiction novel that would appeal to 5 th-8 th grade students. Ugh. “I’ll start making B’s. ” So many Americans are immigrants, or are the children or grandchildren of immigrants, and the clash between cultures is one that many of us can connect to. “Then get racoon eyes. ” Tween and Teen readers of all cultural backgrounds will be able to relate to Mia (Mai). “If you can stand it, go ahead. ” UGH!! “I’ll start wearing eyeliner. ” “I’ll wear-” “Listen, Bà has sacrificed everything for us. We’ve raised you to be considerate, so act like it. ” p. 25, Listen, Slowly A conversation between Mai (Mia) and her father shortly after they arrive in Vietnam.
Listen, Slowly gives readers another reason to learn about the beautiful country, people, foods, culture, history, and language of Vietnam. Connect to the Social Studies Curriculum. Lead a research project.
Raising Children Inside a War This amazing poem was published by the New York Times on April 21, 2017. Please follow the link to read the full poem. It is too lengthy for me to include in its entirety. See the beginning of the poem on the following slide. Raising Children Inside a War I was 2 years old in 1967, too young to remember much about the war. So recently I sat down to interview my 86 -year-old mother. Here’s her story. It’s written in a prose-poem style to reflect how my mother thinks in Vietnamese. -THANHHÀ LẠI
1967 Our family ăn Tết to, welcomed grandly, the Year of the Goat so the younger children could believe our lives in Sài Gòn remained unfractured even though their father was captured by the Communists the previous spring. I hired an expert to wrap in banana leaves twenty square-shaped bánh chungs. We stayed awake night before the eve boiling the Tết cakes in a steel water drum. All arms stiffened from stirring a pot thick with sugary mung beans, stirred and stirred then poured chè kho onto a tray wide as a mat. Morning of Tết each child received crisp money in red envelopes. The oldest daughter just out of high school received a floral-patterned áo dài to wear to her first job as a translator. Her father gone, she must work as I was weaning the last child. The six boys each owned two new white school button downs and a pair of blue school pants. The two youngest girls wore matching pink dresses from a French boutique. How they laughed and ate, same as when their father was home. I told the six youngest, ages 12, 10, 8, 6, 4 and 2, father was training again with the United States Navy. They were to study and make him proud. I believed without blinking their father would be returned. The Communists were fighting to unite the country. Why would they harm a fellow northerner who never shot a gun, who enlisted in the south’s navy to earn an officer’s salary for his family? Like most young men in the north he first joined the nationalists to expel the French from Vietnam. But soon he understood he would likely die in the jungle, by a lake, in a war where nationalists flipped into Communists and claimed his ancestral land for their cause. He went from Hà Nội to Sài Gòn when the country divided in 1954, and I joined him as a mother of three.
Interviews with Thanhhà Lại: School Library Journal http: //www. slj. com/2012/01/authors-illustrators/interviews/the-inside-story-thanhha-lai/ NPR http: //www. npr. org/blogs/thetwo-way/2011/11/29/142905830/book-award-winners-tale-echoes-those -told-by-other-vietnamese-refugees Publishers Weekly http: //www. publishersweekly. com/pw/by-topic/childrens-authors/article/49551 -pw-talks-with -nba-winner-thanhha-lai. html National Book Foundation http: //www. nationalbook. org/nba 2011_ypl_lai_interv. html#. Uy. C 3 p_ld. VIk Orange Coast Magazine http: //www. orangecoast. com/february 2012/thanhhalai. aspx Publishing Perspectives http: //publishingperspectives. com/2011/12/thanhha-lai-from-wartime-saigon-to-the-national-bookawards/
Interviews continued… NPR All Things Considered http: //www. npr. org/2015/02/12/385793936/listen-slowly-about-connecting-to-a-heritage-you-dont-know TIME for Kids http: //www. timeforkids. com/node/220286/print Teaching Books http: //www. teachingbooks. net/book_reading. cgi? id=11046&a=1
Viet Kids Thanhhà Lại started this non-profit to purchase much needed bicycles for poor students in Vietnam, to dramatically cut down on their long school commutes. 30 -50 bicycles are purchased each year, along with funding for tuition, uniforms, and rice. Check out: https: //www. thanhhalai. com/vietkids/ if you would like to make a donation.
References Books and Articles Lai, T. (April 21, 2017). Raising Children Inside a War. New York Times. Lai, T. (2011). Inside Out and Back Again. New York, New York: Scholastic by arrangement with Harper Collins Children’s Books. Lai, T. (2015). Listen, Slowly. New York, New York: Harper Collins Children’s Books. Websites Coffey, H. June 21, 2017, Independent. https: //www. independent. co. uk/travel/48 -hours-in/ho-chi-minh-city-guide-what-to-do-in-saigon-weekend-break-48 -hours-vietnam-best-restaurants-bars-a 7799301. html Frierson, J. March 30, 2013. A Biography of Thanhha Lai. https: //beyondthepalebooks. wordpress. com/2013/03/30/a-biography-of-thanhha-lai/ Thanhha Lai, Audio Name Pronunciation. https: //www. teachingbooks. net/pronounce. cgi? aid=15573&a=1 Vietnam War, 2009, A&E Networks. https: //www. history. com/topics/vietnam-war-history Thanhha Lai’s Website https: //www. thanhhalai. com
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