Preface
Acknowledgments
Maps
Family Tree
1. A Burial in the Night
2. Shut Gate and High Walls
3. The Silk Merchant
4. French Veneer, Confucian Soul
5. Taxes, Floods, and Robbers
6. The Third Month in the Year of the Famine
7. The Head on the Roof
8. Into the Resistance Zone
9. Poison and Bribes
10. The Fall of a Border Garrison
11. Sifting Through the Rubble
12. The New Mecca
13. Just Cause
14. Short Peace, Long War
15. Flying Into the Unknown
16. The Spoils of Victory
17. The Hours of Gold and Jade
Epilogue: Across the Four Seas
Bibliography
Index
Mai Elliott was born and raised in Vietnam and attended Georgetown University on a scholarship. She lived in Vietnam again from 1963 to 1968 and worked for the Rand Corporation interviewing Viet Cong prisoners of war. She returned to the U.S. in 1968 and now lives in California.
"This family's saga is as engrossing as fine literary fiction and
is, besides, indispensable to understanding Vietnam from a
Vietnamese perspective.--The New Yorker
"[Elliott] reverently weaves the tale of a century of tremendous
upheaval...and shows how the tragedies of her family are a window
to understanding the Vietnamese century. It is a wonderful book,
written with care, and it is extremely suggestive."--Touchstone
"This is an excellent text which provides an insightful, personal
history of a Vietnamese family. Through one family the reader
discovers the real ramifications of a country at war for most of
the 20th century."--Seth Bardo, Phillips Academy
"This is a family saga sweeping you along 4 generations of recent
Vietnamese history. This should at last allow the American student
of the war to understand 'the other side'--both its steely
willpower and tender hearts."--Guenter Bischf, University of New
Orleans
"Those of us who reported from Vietnam during the war never fully
understood the Vietnamese and the hardships they endured. Duong Van
Mai Elliott's account of her family's experiences is a vivid,
poignant, often inspiring story that I wish we could have read
before we became involved in a conflict that was tragic for both
Vietnamese and Americans." --Stanley Karnow, author of Vietnam: A
History
"[This] story could not be more compelling.... Voices a perspective
until now missing from the English-language body of work on the
Vietnam conflict.... Objectivity marks Elliott's book and makes it
the best kind of history, [one] we may escape from repeating by
reading of this remarkable family."--Beth Hughes, San Francisco
Examiner
"Suspenseful and gripping, Elliott's writing becomes a masterful
narrative as she tells the various misadventures her family
experienced trying to flee Vietnam.... It may be the story of the
Duong clan, but it's also a story many Vietnamese will recognize as
their own, and it will allow others an insight into a war they
never have understood."--San Jose Mercury News
"A gripping and enlightening account of the trials and triumphs of
one remarkable family, whose story brings Vietnam's turbulent past
to life as no other book I have ever read. Its great strength is
that it is the story of Vietnam through the eyes of the Vietnamese,
something that has been sorely needed in the West. I found it
excellent and recommend it highly." --Don Oberdorfer,
Journalist-in-Residence, Johns Hopkins University School of
Advanced International
Studies, author of TET
"For too long Vietnamese voices have been conspicuous by their
absence in the Western literature on the Vietnam War, a fact that
has led to the common misperception that the conflict was an
American tragedy only. This book fills that gap admirably. In a
riveting and frequently moving account, author Mai Elliott
chronicles the lives of four generations of a Vietnamese family
whose members are caught up in the throes of war and revolution.
Their story is told
with both insight and compassion, while presenting a poignant
portrait of the difficult moral dilemmas faced by individuals
trapped in the web of a bitter civil war. Highly recommended."
--William J.
Duiker, Penn State University, author of The Communist Road to
Power in Vietnam
"An extraordinary collective biography that spans the history of
Vietnam from colonial conquest to `market socialism.' Fascinating
and moving--there is nothing like it anywhere."--Marilyn B. Young,
author of The Vietnam Wars
"There can be no better vehicle for understanding the modern
history of Vietnam than the microcosm of the family. . .With deep
insight and empathy, Elliott skillfully weaves the life stories of
her great- grandparents, grandparents, parents, uncles, aunts,
sisters, brothers, and cousins into the intricate tapestry of
modern Vietnamese history. This is a beautiful and utterly
absorbing work, a book of extraordinary emotional power that is
also a major
contribution to historical understanding. It deserves the widest
audience and belongs in all libraries."--Library Journal
"This is a beautiful and utterly absorbing work, a book of
extraordinary emotional power that is also a major contribution to
historical understanding. It deserves the widest audience and
belongs in all libraries." --Steven L. Levine, University of
Montana, Missoula
"It is rare to find a book on Vietnam that provides clear and
reliable guidance to the general reader and at the same time opens
up significant insights for the specialist scholar. Mai Elliot does
both. Not only is there much in her account that is new and
important and her perceptivity open and fresh, but her pen flows
with a grace and eloquence that makes this salient era of Vietnam's
history become vivid and alive to an extent normally possible only
in a
historical novel. But this is solid history at its very best--and
fascinating to read." George McT. Kahin, Aaron L. Binenkorb
Professor of International Studies Emeritus, Cornell University
"In writing this splendid and engrossing history of her own family
the author illuminates the extraordinary qualities in the
Vietnamese people and how they have endured their own brutal
history. There is no other book like this one: it is gripping and
beautiful."--Gloria Emerson, author of Winners and Losers: Batles,
Retreats, Gains, Losses, and Ruins from a Long War
"Those familiar with the history of the Vietnam War will want to
read The Sacred Willow for its portrayal of four generations of
Vietnamese caught up in the conflict. But perhaps even more
important, those who know nothing about the war will find the story
irresistible. If you have room in your library for only a few books
on Vietnam--this book should be there."-- Lloyd Gardner, Rutgers
University, author of Approaching Vietnam : from World War
II through Dienbienphu, 1941-1954
"There can be no better vehicle for understanding the modern
history of Vietnam than the microcosm of the family.... With deep
insight and empathy, Elliott skillfully weaves the life stories of
her great-grandparents, grandparents, parents, uncles, aunts,
sisters, brothers, and cousins into the intricate tapestry of
modern Vietnamese history. This is a beautiful and utterly
absorbing work, a book of extraordinary emotional power that is
also a major
contribution to historical understanding."--Library Journal
(starred review)
"In this deeply moving family saga, Elliott offers a microcosm of
the history of modern Vietnam.... Elliott writes with unsparing
candor about forging a new identity, about her nation's destruction
and its partial revival with the reintroduction of free-market
mechanisms and, above all, about her family's harrowing passage
through a long, difficult history."--Publishers Weekly
"Despite its heft, this sprawling memoir of a Vietnamese family is
an immensly readable book. Author Duong Van Mai Elliott has
compiled her remarkable story....It is Elliott's ability to share
her family's flaws and admit her own shortcomings that makes this a
work of such compelling human interest."--Barbara Lloyd
McMichael,Seattle Times
"This family's saga is as engrossing as fine literary fiction and
is, besides, indispensable to understanding Vietnam from a
Vietnamese perspective."--The New Yorker
"Marvelously rich book.... The author--a middle daughter from whom
not too much was expected--has absorbed her family's collective
history with a novelist's eye for telling detail.... Indeed, it is
Mai Elliot's abiding talent for seeing things objectively--combined
with her writerly skills, her deep knowledge of her nation's
history, and her immersion in her family's ongoing oral story of
itself--that gives us... detailed eyewitness accounts of
extraordinary
things that lie beyond and behind the last war.... These are
aspects of history and culture that could never be presented with
such immediacy by any foreign writer.... All of this is delivered
with a
close-up immediacy that allows us to enter another world.... Its
skillful writing is itself a kind of filial piety, while its
objective sense of history summons up compassionate insights into
the human struggles of family and nation. Fascinating."--John
Balaban, The Washington Post Book World
"Plunges readers into a fascinating story told from a Vietnamese
point of view, explaining the war in a context much larger that the
limited perspective of American involvement...a very unique and
broad perspective."--Steve Galpern, Denver Rocky Mountain News
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