Reviews" Koan Khmer takes us to the edges of interbeing. We travel with an orphan child named Samnang Sok, who has survived genocide--as legions of children around the globe do, and do not--as he tries to piece together a story strong enough to hold his life. With the generosity of a poet of witness, Tuon carefully and lovingly opens the space of refugee long enough for us to bear witness to the full brutal and beautiful experiences of Cambodian Americans. I feel like I have a new heart tattoo. I am grateful." --Lidia Yuknavitch, author of Thrust and The Chronology of Water, "A sobering account of the tragic reality of the dehumanization of war, not only on its innocent victims caught in the crossfire, but on the psyches of those caught on opposite sides of conflicts . . . The toll of the war is vividly and powerfully unpacked in Tuon's very personal and tender account of one family's traumatic journey of escape to America . . . an impressive first novel." -- East Wind " Koan Khmer takes us to the edges of interbeing. We travel with an orphan child named Samnang Sok, who has survived genocide--as legions of children around the globe do, and do not--as he tries to piece together a story strong enough to hold his life. With the generosity of a poet of witness, Tuon carefully and lovingly opens the space of refugee long enough for us to bear witness to the full brutal and beautiful experiences of Cambodian Americans. I feel like I have a new heart tattoo. I am grateful." --Lidia Yuknavitch, author of Thrust and The Chronology of Water, "No matter how long Samnang spends in the United States, he can't leave his Cambodian roots behind, and he deeply understands that he doesn't want to do so . . . A quietly affecting novel of the refugee experience." -- Kirkus "A sobering account of the tragic reality of the dehumanization of war, not only on its innocent victims caught in the crossfire, but on the psyches of those caught on opposite sides of conflicts . . . The toll of the war is vividly and powerfully unpacked in Tuon's very personal and tender account of one family's traumatic journey of escape to America . . . an impressive first novel." -- East Wind "Tuon's work chooses to shed light not just on the direct and tangible effects of the Khmer Rouge, but also a continued and often internal conflict faced by Cambodian refugees following their escape. [ Koan Khmer ] highlights the struggle of rebuilding a sense of self in the shadow of immense trauma and loss." -- Full Stop " Koan Khmer takes us to the edges of interbeing. We travel with an orphan child named Samnang Sok, who has survived genocide--as legions of children around the globe do, and do not--as he tries to piece together a story strong enough to hold his life. With the generosity of a poet of witness, Tuon carefully and lovingly opens the space of refugee long enough for us to bear witness to the full brutal and beautiful experiences of Cambodian Americans. I feel like I have a new heart tattoo. I am grateful." --Lidia Yuknavitch, author of Thrust and The Chronology of Water, " Koan Khmer gives light to the Cambodian immigrant/refugee experience, which is unlike any other, and challenges the easy narratives we are fed by mainstream media about the immigrant experience. Transcending the survival narrative, Bunkong Tuon's debut novel presents to readers a narrator who is not merely the keeper of stories but also the one who seeks, who endeavors, who is more than witness. This is not a book about survival. It is a book about striving." --Ira Sukrungruang, author of Buddha's Dog other Meditations, "No matter how long Samnang spends in the United States, he can't leave his Cambodian roots behind, and he deeply understands that he doesn't want to do so . . . A quietly affecting novel of the refugee experience." -- Kirkus "A sobering account of the tragic reality of the dehumanization of war, not only on its innocent victims caught in the crossfire, but on the psyches of those caught on opposite sides of conflicts . . . The toll of the war is vividly and powerfully unpacked in Tuon's very personal and tender account of one family's traumatic journey of escape to America . . . an impressive first novel." -- East Wind " Koan Khmer takes us to the edges of interbeing. We travel with an orphan child named Samnang Sok, who has survived genocide--as legions of children around the globe do, and do not--as he tries to piece together a story strong enough to hold his life. With the generosity of a poet of witness, Tuon carefully and lovingly opens the space of refugee long enough for us to bear witness to the full brutal and beautiful experiences of Cambodian Americans. I feel like I have a new heart tattoo. I am grateful." --Lidia Yuknavitch, author of Thrust and The Chronology of Water
Table Of ContentPART I: A Cambodian Family Portrait Under the Tamarind Tree Birth Leaving Cambodia Lok-Yeay and Her Children Bopha Yellow Bird The Old Man and the Mermaid PART II: Surviving in America Dust from the Sky Lucky Dawn We Were Refugees Tom and Jerry American Dream Lok-Ta Friends Pu Vaesnar Enclosed Paradise The Old Woman and Her Dog A Simple Misunderstanding The Doyles A February Evening The Keys Where is Samnang? Exposed The Letter The Letter # 2 Rage Rat Boy Graduation PART III: A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Cambodian American What Are You Doing With Your Life? Going West "Ana-herm" Street A Dream Br_ndon Lieu The Writer's Club Another Beginning A Dream on Fire A New Family Why Write? Dear Mr. Sok PART IV: Koan Khmer Letter from Koan Khmer Epilogue Acknowledgments
SynopsisA powerful debut novel about war, immigration, and home Celebrating the power of literature to rescue a life from despair, Koan Khmer is the story of Samnang Sok, an orphaned child survivor of the Cambodian genocide who sets out to make a new life in America alongside his extended family. Struggling to cope with the traumas of his past, Samnang feels alienated from his American peers at school and disconnected from his aunts, uncles, and cousins at home. Inspired by the books he discovers along the way, Samnang begins piecing together information about the past through stories told by elders, family photographs, and his own memories and dreams. Based loosely on Tuon's life, the novel traces Samnang's difficult journey toward an answer to the question, How does one rebuild a life after genocide and displacement and create a home? Koan Khmer gives an unflinching voice to a distinctly Cambodian American sensibility. Tuon creates a refugee space that all Americans can visit in this bildungsroman that breathes life into cultural knowledge disrupted by loss and grief.
LC Classification NumberPS3620.U63K63 2024