A little Vietnamese girl tries to come to terms with her grief over the loss of her family and her new life with the Australian family with whom she lives
I had read one story titled ”Onion Tears”. The story talked about a girl that lost her family and she learn how to lived her life without them. She from Vietnam.
Nam-Huong is a quiet and lonely girl. She cried in side every time when she remember her family. She lost her family during the war when the soldiers took her Dad and she lost her Grandpa when they are on the boat to escape from the soldiers. Now she lived with her aunty and Chu-Mind in Australia, but she not a real aunty of Nam-Huong. She go to school, but she doesn’t have friends. Her classmate always make fun of Nam-Huong and she scared to tells them to happens to her, why she doesn’t talk. She always wrote a letter to her family and her best friend Canary, It’s a bird. She had been quiet for long time until she learn how to smile, laugh and cried for real.
I like this book very much, because all this story tells us about the experiences of Nam-Huong life. It was a very interesting and fantastic book. I also like author’s writing, it easy to understand the meaning of the story.
I had an experience like Nam-Huong too. When I was 8 years old. I was left by my mom in grandma’s care. Like Nam-Huong, I always wanted to see my mom everyday, but I am lucker than Nam-Huong because sometimes my mom she came to visited me. I also experience to helped in the household worked at my young age. I wish Nam-Huong can find her family and her best friend canary like as I am right now!
A short book that gives insight into the experiences of a Vietnamese refugee, her life in Australia and the trauma she keeps locked inside.
It was published in 1989, but set even earlier, so it is describing 1970's Australia. This makes some aspects of life very incongruous to experiences today - most notably a teacher camping with her students! Most schools in Sydney would also be much, much more multicultural now than what is described here, but I remember similar experiences growing up.
Nam-Huong's teacher becomes sick, but I didn't feel this added anything to the story. It seemed a strange little aside.
Read this one to prep for school but was moved to tears by this story. The author gives kids an insight into what life can be like for refugee kids and the hidden trauma they experience through our protagonists voice. Beautiful opportunities to connect, reflect and be grateful.
BOOK REVIEW ABOUT ONION TEARS This is a fantastic and interesting story of a little Vietnam refugee girl named Nam-Huong. She emigrated from Vietnamese to Australia with her grandfather by a small boat. She loses contacts with her family and her best friend for life ‘’little yellow cannery’’. Nam-Huong lived with Aunty and Chu-Minh because her family was in Vietnam. She started going to school but she has no friends because she’s really quite because of what happened to her in her past life. She met a teacher called Miss Lily.Miss Lily tries to listen to Nam-Houng and cheer her up.
Diana Kidd, wrote this book for children to read and enjoy. It might make them realize what they have and appreciate it. This gives the reader a idea of how hard it is to leave the people you love the most and live in a new country.
The book onion tears is so interesting story which was happen in veitnam and australia. Nam Huong is the lonely girl of this story. she have long story of her life which is wrote in this book(onion tears)
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This book is about a child who has recently left home, and travelled far to reach a safe country away from soldiers. She has left behind her family and is living with a foster/ adoption family. The book would be great for children to read to become more aware of refugees, creating a more inclusive classroom if any children can relate to their story. The other children at her school do not understand why she is so quiet, and are not so nice about her circumstance. This book could help children within a classroom to be kinder to others as they may not know their background.
The books uses letters from the child to different characters from her home town. Children could use this book as a basis when learning how to write their own letters.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Diab this one is for you. Takes me back to the time you tried quizzing me the spelling bee cuisine words in the staffroom a few weeks ago. I’m not that good. You also challenged me to add all my teacher reads on here. I’ll give you one but this was my own personal pursuit.
Onion Tears is an excellent book that tells us about a refugee girl emigrating from Vietnam to Australia for a new life. She emigrated from Vietnam on a small boat and she lost contact with her family. When she immigrated to Australia, a wonderful and kind woman, Aunty (that’s what Nam-Huong calls her), took her as a daughter and let her live in her house. When Nam-Huong left home she never cried real tears, she only cried onion tears when cutting onions in her Aunt’s small restaurant.
In school Nam-Huong is a quiet and lonely girl that gets bullied in class by making fun of her name. Her only friend is the teacher Miss Lily; the students say her house is haunted because they all hate her. She never did anything about the bullying because she can’t talk and cry because she’s bottling everything inside her heart. Nam-Huong hopes that her family will be reunited again one day.
In my opinion this book will be very good for politicians to read because it tells what asylum seekers go through. Personally I like this book because it tells us about how asylum seekers live and try to escape from wars, so I really recommend it for people to read.
Onion Tears is a beautiful book about a young refugee girl coming to terms with her new life. Immigrating on a small boat from Vietnam, Nam-Huong loses contact with all of her family and is taken in by "Aunty". The only tears she can shed are those when cutting onions in her aunty's small restaurant. The book illustrates the lack of comprehension by classmates, some of the coping strategies of those who have to flee their homes, and the hope that one day family will be reunited. Although written for children, this book will touch the hearts of every reader. It is rooted in truth, incorporating the stories of a number of young South-Esat Asian students who had emigrated to Australia, making it even more poignant. In the classroom this is a book to promote discussion on immigration and refugees. I am looking forward to sharing it with a high school ESL class of young immigrants to Australia.
Diana Kidd's short novel Onion Tears provides an evocative account of Nam-Huong's life, after fleeing war in Vietnam. Re-settled in Australia, she lives with 'Aunty' and Chu Minh, a chef in Aunty's restaurant. Grief and trauma have left Nam-Huong mute, as she tries to make sense of past and of her new life, neither of which are easy. I have to admit a weakness for mute characters in literature. One reason is that writers have to work extra hard when characters cannot simply speak. One device Diana Kidd uses to give Nam-Huong voice, is a series of letters she composes to the swallows that she imagines are the same ones passing by her family in Vietnam. A really beautiful and emotional story, I have read this several times and think it is excellent for explaining many hardships of a refugee experience to children.
Onion Tears by Diana Kidd Onion Tears is a wonderful book, it’s about a young Vietnamese girl immigrating on a small boat to Australia. She loses connection with her family and she lives with a boy named Chu-Minh and her adopted Aunty in a small restaurant. Nam-Huong goes to school but she has no friends because she doesn’t talk (she is very quiet). She has a teacher named Miss Lily who tries to get Nam-Huong to talk. I like the book a lot it made me sad for what happened to Nam-Huong but it made me happy towards the end. The book was awesome and fantastic it would help people understand what happens to refugees when they leave their countries.
TW: Death. A less advanced novel most suited to middle school students, Onion Tears depicts the life of Nam-Huong, a Vietnamese refugee living in Australia. After the death of her parents, Nam-Huong must adjust to life in Australia with only the support of her adoptive parents and her hostile classmates. Although this is a rather simple novel, its honest portrayal of the difficulties of being a refugee, and of experiencing trauma in general, presents an accessible and engaging text. Some students may already be familiar with the feelings of grief and confusion Nam-Huong must deal with, while others may find her struggle more removed from their experiences.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
A short story about a refugee girl from Vietnam looking for her inner voice and inner peace.
From Nam's point of view, we see the hardship she and her family had gone through during the war in Vietnam to their escape to a new found land (I'm assuming it's Australia).
A beautiful tragic story of war-torn refugees finding a land full of hope and fresh start while embracing who they are and where they came from.
The time i read the"onion tears" is that i first arrived USA. Settled in the new country, everything is new..i feel curious sometimes but also helpless. I felt the same feeling as Nam. Thus, this book really taugh me. Exactly strike my mind. This is a book that worth to reading.
Moving, extremely powerful and yet delicately written; I've read this book several times since it came out, and still felt I gained something from the latest rereading. Diana Kidd was a wonderful writer and is sadly missed, as both writer and friend.
this book is a bout Nam hung travelling with a little boat with her grandfather and leaving her mom and dad at Vietnam and she left Vietnam because there was a war going on their. And now she lives with her aunty and Chu minh and her teacher miss Lilly.
When reading this book I noticed that you really have to take your time to understand everything clearly. You have to infer a lot of times because it will not tell you what happens the book shows you. I really enjoyed it and highly recommend it.
I love this book with all my heart What a short read it was And the story was so powerful. A book that everyone should and must read. It tells a very important and not really talk about story in a different aspect compared to other books. By far the best book i have read and enjoyed in a long time.