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The Unwanted: A Memoir of Childhood

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A story of hope, a story of survival, and an incredible journey of escape, 'The Unwanted' is the only memoir by an Amerasian who stayed behind in Vietnam after the fall of Saigon and who is now living in America.

343 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2002

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About the author

Kien Nguyen

9 books41 followers
Kien Nguyen was born to a Vietnamese mother from a once wealthy family and her American civil engineer lover. His mother's family, who had lost their wealth when the French left Vietnam, lived among neighbors who treated them as pariahs because of their colonialist background. Kien, a child of mixed race, was especially ostracized from the community.

He left Vietnam in 1985 through the United Nations "Orderly Departure Program." After spending time at a refugee camp in the Philippines, he arrived in the United States and became a dentist. He lives in New York City.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 289 reviews
Profile Image for Jenna ❤ ❀  ❤.
893 reviews1,849 followers
August 14, 2020
Recently I got into a bit of the dreaded reading slump. You probably know what I'm talking about - where absolutely nothing seems interesting enough to keep your mind on the book. You search and search for one but even books you've been looking forward to reading have lost their appeal. 

Last Friday I found myself plopped firmly down in that Valley of Lost Interest, that bleak and lonely place where readers everywhere fear spending time in. 

OK, maybe that's a bit melodramatic. But if you've found yourself there, and I'm sure you have, you know it's not a fun place for book lovers.

Beginning last Friday, from my dark and desolate place (again, I know that's melodramatic but stick with me) I searched and searched for a book to lead me out of the lowland I had sunk into. 

I downloaded and began reading five or six books. I returned every single one of them after only a few chapters. 

Then I started The Unwanted: A Memoir of Childhood and it was the perfect book to get me out of my slump.

These days with all that's going on in the world, it's easy to become overwhelmed with worry and despair. Easy to get caught up in our own little lives rather than focus on helping others with much larger worries and problems.

And no, I wasn't actually feeling sorry for myself that I couldn't get into a book; it's nothing but a minor annoyance. I began my review in this way to point out how we can magnify trivialities in our own lives and get stuck in ourselves, rather than looking around us with compassion and empathy at the very real suffering of others.

The author of this memoir, Kien Nguyen, was eight years old when all of Vietnam fell under Communist rule. Life was difficult for everyone except those in charge (as always happens under Communism, despite its ideology of equality for all).

Kien and his brother were Amerasian, their fathers American men who had worked in Vietnam. Because of this, they were treated even worse under Communist rule than others. 

This book is not easy to read. The things Kien and his family endured is the stuff of nightmares. I was often horrified, wishing I could reach back through time as my adult self and save this young child from the atrocities he both witnessed and endured. 

Kien writes openly about his suffering and his pain, reliving the nightmare of his childhood as he sought to free himself of it. For ten long years he suffered horrific abuse, all while clinging to his humanity and hope for a better life.

Many memoirs are filled with self-pity and seem intent on gaining the pity of others. Despite all he endured, Kien never comes across in this way. He shows his humanity and his concern for others. He shares not just what happened to him but also the rest of his family. 

I cannot imagine going through what Kien did and still finding hope for a better life. And yet he did. Though at times overcome with despair, he was able to dig deep inside himself and find the will and strength to survive.

This memoir is compelling and engaging. Mr. Nguyen writes with much clarity and honesty. In the beginning I found some of the dialogue awkward but I think that is due to the fact that conversations don't always translate well into another language. I quickly became used to it and found it added to the authenticity of the book. 

I highly recommend this book to those of you who enjoy memoirs or who would like to learn more about what the Vietnamese people endured under Communist rule.

Because of his hope in a better life, Kien eventually made his way to America overcoming many obstacles. It is a story of hope and survival and of Kien's indomitable spirit and will to live.  He is an inspiration and a remarkable person and I feel lucky to have been able to read his memoir.
Profile Image for Skorofido Skorofido.
300 reviews213 followers
May 4, 2018
Αυτό το βιβλίο δεν το ‘χα στο πρόγραμμα. Είδα όμως την κριτική μιας φίλης, το βιβλίο βρισκόταν από χρόνια στο ράφι ως άλλη γεροντοκόρη, μπόλικη σκόνη είχε μαζέψει, βγήκαν στη φόρα και οι αλλεργίες μου και είπα να του ρίξω μια ματιά… Μου αρέσουν γενικά αυτές οι αληθινές ιστορίες, οι αληθινές όμως, όχι αυτές τύπου αληθινές που βάζει ο κάθε συγγραφέας ό,τι μλκ του κατέβει και μετά γράφει στο εξώφυλλο ‘βασισμένο σε αληθινή ιστορία’ κι εσύ είσαι αναγκασμένος να τις πιστέψεις.
Ο Κιεν, είναι από αυτές τις παράπλευες απώλειες της ιστορίας… Μάνα Βιετναμέζα, μπαμπάς Αμερικάνος και μετά την ήττα των Αμερικανών στο Βιετνάμ, ‘μην τον είδατε τον Παναή’, μένει ο Κιεν με το στίγμα όχι απλώς του μπάσταρδου αλλά και του αντιδραστικού στοιχείου, του σπόρου του κακού…
Είναι λοιπόν η ιστορία του Κιεν μέχρι την φυγή του στην Αμερική… ένα βιβλίο που διαβάζεται απνευστί, καλογραμμένο, πέρα ως πέρα αληθινό, για έναν πόλεμο που στοίχειωσε τη γενιά μου με διαδηλώσεις και άλλα τέτοια ωραία (πόσοι δεν γνωρίσαμε τον έρωτα τότε – good morning Vietnam), αλλά σε άλλους ήταν η ίδια τους η ζωή που ρημάχτηκε…
Υ.Γ. Το βιβλίο μάλλον κυμαίνεται γύρω στα 4/5, όμως επικροτώ το θάρρος του συγγραφέα και όλη του την αλήθεια, οπότε ναι ρε φίλε 5/5 όλο δικό σου!
Δεν είναι λογοτεχνικό to πόνημα (αν και η γραφή είναι απείρως καλύτερη από πολλά βιβλία που το παίζουν λογοτεχνία), ανήκει στα λεγόμενα απομνημονεύματα να το πω, αυτοβιογραφία να το πω… κάτι τέτοιο τέλος πάντων…
Μου άρεσε… απόδειξη πως το ξεκίνησα χθες βράδυ και σήμερα το τελείωσα…
Το μόνο πρόβλημα πως είναι εξαντλημένο στον εκδότη αλλά όποιος θέλει, βρίσκει…
Profile Image for Stephen Gallup.
Author 1 book72 followers
November 8, 2010
As a student of memoir, I generally prefer examples that include a fair amount of introspection and reevaluation of past events. But analysis is more appropriate for some material than others. A small child living through apocalyptic times is unlikely to display introspection, and the adult author looking back on those times will be intrusive if he does more than simply provide the facts of his experience. Here, I was the one doing the pondering.

It's sobering to try and comprehend the multitudes of innocent people who have been caught up in and destroyed by events such as those described here. Everyone (of my generation, at least) remembers the iconic photo of people on the roof of the embassy in Saigon, grabbing the last helicopter out in 1975. If you want some human context for that event -- specifically, concerning those who could not evacuate -- this is the book to read. I also think it's instructive to experience situations like these vicariously, since one never really knows what the future holds. It's also a pointed reminder that good intentions are no guarantee of anything. The outcome described here is obscene in the context of the lofty principles the young people are taught to recite, and doubly so in view of the enormous sacrifices previously made there by Americans and others.

The prose betrays no indication that the author is not a native speaker of English, and indeed it includes judicious use of literary devices (the thunder growls like an empty stomach, veins stand out in someone’s throat like fat worms, etc.). It's an easy read -- aside from the fact that the circumstances described go from bad to appalling to hellish, and then to ever deeper levels of hell, proving Dante right. It also reinforces a history lesson that the world ought to have absorbed by now (at the time this was going on, my wife was enduring China's brand of Communism a few hundred miles to the north). It provides a study of what happens to human relationships when the very structure of civilization is turned on its head, and a warning to those of us in the West that we must not take our inherited way of life for granted. I'm left feeling concern for the author, because despite his escape at the end, nobody could live through these experiences without being severely messed up psychologically. I hope writing about it has helped him.
Profile Image for Chrissie.
2,811 reviews1,421 followers
January 19, 2021
There is no question in my mind concerning how many stars to give this book. Actually 5 is too little. This is my all time favorite book. Many have it on their "to-read" lists. Put it at the top. Make it the next book you read.

The suspense at the end made my heart race. I had to stop to get air. I was racing over the words to find out what would happen even though I knew he would end up on the plane. You KNOW that he ended up in the States, he wrote the book there. I had to know exactly how it occured. There is no way a book of fiction can ever, ever create such suspense.

And then the message - how to live your life - is so good! And what this book says about people. Horrible, and yet maybe there is hope. I don't know where to start except to say that we all must appreciate our life. Why do people only value what they are about to loose? Why is it so hard for us to appreciate what we have while we have it?

As soon as I can I will read Tapestries written by the same author. It is classified as historical fiction, but it based on his grandfather, who is in this book too. It is the author's grangfather who tries to guide Kien toward appreciating life while you have it. The author expresses this musch better than I do.

You are making a HUGE mistake if you don't read this book. Yes, it is hard, but life is hard, and the author has humility and he knows that he is only one of many, many others who has lived such horror.
2 reviews1 follower
February 26, 2008
A quick read - difficult to put down. What a heartbreaking story of a young boy's growing up years. Hard to think how many others shared these same experiences in war torn countries over the years. Makes a person so very grateful for growing up without having to live in a land torn by war.

Throughout the story was an underlying story of his mothers' strugle to provide for her family and elderly parents. A very well written description of his perception of his mother and how much she changed over a few short years.

Reccomended reading for all.
Profile Image for Katerina Charisi.
179 reviews77 followers
April 29, 2018
Πιστεύω ότι αν το βιβλίο είχε περισσότερη βοήθεια θα μπορούσε να ήταν περισσότερο γνωστό. Συνήθως στα memoirs μας ενδιαφέρει απλώς η ιστορία που θα ειπωθεί και όχι το πώς. Στην περίληψη καταλαβαίνουμε πως το βιβλίο κινείται στο στίγμα του "μπάσταρδου" και το "χωρίς πατρίδα" όμως τελικά δεν είναι ακριβώς έτσι. Περισσότερο βλέπουμε το χρονικό μιας ανθρώπινης ύπαρξης μέσα από τη φρίκη του πολέμου και την πολιτική παράνοια, την ανθρώπινη κατάντια, τη διαλυμένη οικογένεια, με τον αφηγητή να είναι παρατηρητής - παρά το ότι ο ίδιος βίωσε ολοκληρωτικά τα πάντα (!)

Βέβαια, πώς θα μπορούσε ο οποιοσδήποτε να κρίνει έναν άνθρωπο που αρχικά επιθυμούσε απλώς να σωθεί από όλες αυτές τις εμπειρίες βγάζοντας τις αναμνήσεις από μέσα του για να γλιτώσει.

Αξίζει να διαβαστεί.
Profile Image for Karyl.
2,136 reviews151 followers
April 4, 2013
Kien Nguyen isn't much older than my husband, but the horror he lived through in Vietnam as a child is far beyond the scope of any American's imagination. His family, once very wealthy before the fall of Saigon, becomes one of the poorest families in war-torn Vietnam. He and his brother are shunned as "half-breeds," their American ancestry evident in their features. Because his mother was once at the top of society, she is punished in the new Communist regime, and has to give everything up to prove that she renounces her previous capitalist ways. Kien's suffering is magnified by the hatred of his aunt and her family, and he is tormented daily by his cousins. He is abused by his mother's boyfriend, though he has a champion in his grandfather, who constantly stands up for him and tries to protect him.

At some point Kien attempts to escape, to find his way to America and possibly find his biological father. But instead he is met with horrific defeat, seeing some of fellow escapees murdered in cold blood. He is then taken to a re-education camp, where he is treated in a most inhumane manner for several months. But eventually, after years and years and years, he is finally rescued and comes to the States through a program for Amerasian kids.

It is so difficult for me, a comfortable American, to understand how humans can be so brutal to one another. What I find hopeful, however, is how Nguyen has not allowed himself to become embittered by the horrible things that happened to him in Vietnam. I agree with him that it is important for him to tell his story, so we can see the effects of the Vietnam War on its people, and to understand that the war didn't end once the Americans pulled out.

Highly recommend, even though this book is incredibly depressing.
Profile Image for Vy.
8 reviews
November 25, 2011
As a freshmen I thought this book was sad but good at the same time.I taught me what my grandparents and parents had to go through when they were young.The book also showed me what Vietnam was like before the communist took over the country and the people's freedom.As I was reading the book I never imagined that he would get rape by his mom's boyfriend.That's just really mean and sad for him.I feel like because of what happened, he learned it and later did it to that girl.I think it should be a requirement for highschoolers to read it because it's a good book to learn history.
Profile Image for Elyse.
492 reviews56 followers
September 24, 2016
True story of an illegitimate boy born to a Vietnamese woman and her American boyfriend. How this kid survived racism, starvation, rape and torture after the fall of Saigon in 1975 and escaping in 1985 is an amazing story. Not maudlin at all but told in a matter-of-fact manner.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Mai Nguyễn.
Author 14 books2,460 followers
December 18, 2019
I salute the writer for his courage, for it must have been very painful to recall his past experiences, to be able to write this book.
Profile Image for Jeannie.
574 reviews32 followers
July 22, 2009
If I could give this book 10 stars I would, a horrific story of what it was to grow up in Vietnam after communist rule took over. I knew life wasn't easy for those who were considered enemies of that government but I never imagined the depth of the horror. And knowing the author and his brother were really American makes this even more horrific. I thank God he was able to escape to America and make a life for himself here. He says he has no plans to write about his life after he came here, he says it's not important because he is living a "normal life" just like everybody else but I beg to differ. I came to know and care very much about him while reading his story and I would be very interested in reading how he overcame this kind of childhood to be as well-adjusted as he seems to be. I was and am humbled by his life story. This is one of the "top 10 best books" I have read this year.
Profile Image for Justina.
123 reviews4 followers
February 1, 2011
Just when you think the story can't possibly get any more tragic, it does. This book is not for the faint of heart, but there are not many accounts of life in post-Vietnam war Vietnam. Everyone I know from there escaped in 1975, so to read the story of someone who remained for a full ten years after the Americans left was incredible. Even more so, he is half Vietnamese. I have a half Vietnamese child myself, and I cannot believe that anyone could ever see him as anything other than beautiful. It broke my heart to find out how he would have been treated if he were growing up in a different place and a different time. God bless the man that poor child became.
Profile Image for Anh Gordon.
239 reviews4 followers
December 11, 2018
In the middle of April, in 1975, my mother put my two brothers and I, along with my cousins and maternal grandmother, in a car and we snuck to Tan Son Nhat airport in Saigon. I don’t know what my mother did, but I am sure it involved a lot of money and bribing and we were able to get out on a plane safely and head to Guam, then San Diego, where we were taken in as war refugees and able to re-start our lives in the USA. We had nothing and none of us spoke English, but my family was able to get back on their feet after a few hard years and we were able to enjoy “the American Dream”.

The author of this book, Dr. Kien Nguyen, was not so fortunate. The biracial son of a wealthy Vietnamese banker and an American soldier, Kien’s family had their passports and tickets out of Saigon, but his mother kept waiting, hoping to convince her parents, who adamantly did not want to leave. They finally decided to leave without them, but it was April 29, 1975 and the North Vietnamese Army was already advancing into Saigon. Kien and his family had been able to get inside the grounds of the US Embassy, but ended up being one of the thousands of South Vietnamese left behind when Communist forces rolled into Saigon and took over the government.

Kien describes the horrifying events that took place after the takeover, from the looting/destruction of his old home in NhaTrang, to the poverty that his family endured and the racism he and his brother experienced as biracial children in a country where homogeny and “equality” reigned supreme. His mother had a horrible time trying to find work to sustain them, and they sold everything they had for years to try to survive. This book describes his attempt to escape, along with his experience in a re-education camp, to his resignation, 10 years after the takeover, that he would never get out of the country. Interspersed with those tales are the tales of the racism he endured, mostly at the hands of his own cousins and aunt and uncle, and also the tale of a personal assault that was to scar him forever.

This book is so sad and even more sad for me as I think about how narrowly I missed this happening to me and my family. We are not biracial but my parents had many associations with the South Vietnamese Army and the Americans and we surely would have had all our possessions seized and been sent to re-education camps. I cannot imagine the nightmares the author had due to his sad sad childhood /adolescent experiences and I truly hope this book and the others he has written since have helped him to heal.

This book is an “easy” read in that it moves quickly and is very hard to put down. It is a “hard” read because anyone with a conscience or heart would have a difficult time digesting this non-fiction story and imagining these gruesome events happening to a person.

Without a doubt 5/5 stars but with a warning that this is a heart wrenching, depressing read.
Profile Image for Jessica.
663 reviews1 follower
May 19, 2009
So much persecution for such a young boy. Fear and confusion about the meaning behind the hatred were constantly with Kien, who did not initially understand that he had no control over it.

Kien's world changed dramatically when he was still a boy. He was forced to grow up knowing that strangers and even his own family were judging him because of his heritage. He was poked, prodded, looked down on and made to feel inferior, and spent most of his first years not knowing why.

The way he told his story, after all these years, was touching. He didn't lament his lot in life, he didn't belabor the hatred and rejection, but he put all the facts out there and made the reader feel and understand what it was he went through.

It was very well written, and you can't help but to root for Kien, and feel a certain mix of pity and alarm for his mother and brother. The fast-paced ending easily could have been something from an action/fiction novel, yet was the last moments of Kien's life in Vietnam. An amazing view of a boy's strength and determination.
536 reviews
January 16, 2011
The memoir about Kien, An Amerasian, certainly was an awakening to me. This book showed what really happened in Viet Nam before and after the Communist took over Saigon. The heartbreaking story of the survival of these people really made me think twice about our life in the United States of America.
Profile Image for Trinh.
401 reviews227 followers
April 25, 2020
4.5 stars

Trigger warnings: war, death, murder, abortion, sexual violence, dog murder, rape, anti-black racism, and forced prostitution of a minor.
Profile Image for Marianna.
279 reviews9 followers
April 9, 2017
αν μ άρεσε, όχι. αν φρίκαρα, αν συγκλονίστηκα, αν συγκινήθηκα, αν θύμωσα, αν ανακουφίστηκα με το τέλος, ναι σε όλα...
Profile Image for Chana.
1,633 reviews149 followers
May 19, 2013
Kien Nguyen is born in 1967 to a Vietnamese mother and an American father. The father goes back to America when Kien is 3 months old but the mother is doing well. She is part owner of a bank, she has another younger Amerasian child, she lives in a mansion with servants, she is pregnant with her Vietnamese boyfriend's baby. Then Saigon falls to the Viet Cong, the last American helicopters leave and Communism takes over and works hard to destroy anyone who has any belongings or hope. A half-breed child like Kien is hated for being 1/2 "imperialist" "capitalist" American. In the hierarchy of Communism Kien and his family are near the bottom, only 1/2 black Vietnamese fall lower.
What follows is so awful that one can hardly believe it as everyone scrambles to look good in the new regime. Kien is blessed in his grandparents, his brother and his intelligence. I was truthfully very angry with him about his treatment of Kim but if she could forgive him then I guess I can. I'm glad that he made it out of Vietnam and I applaud his efforts to overcome the trauma of his early life and to be a productive and happy person.
Profile Image for Olivia.
279 reviews4 followers
March 10, 2012
One of the reasons I like memoir writing is that the person doesn't have to be a polished writer and it's okay. It is all about the story and the need to get it out there. This is one of those stories that needs to be told. Kien Nguyen is the son of a Vietnamese woman and an American business man. His parents were never married and he never knew his Dad. His family was not able to make it out of Saigon before the Americans pulled out at the end of the Vietnam war. This story details the hardships and tragedies suffered by the Vietnamese people under the rule of the Communist Vietcong. Kien's situation was even worse than the average since he was only "half" Vietnamese. Being only half Vietnamese was EXTREMEMLY politically incorrect at the time. This boy's experiences are heart breaking to read about. God bless America and Texas.
Profile Image for Shannan.
33 reviews
April 25, 2016
This book is both easy to read and difficult to swallow, all at the same time. I tried to explain it to my children, who are always interested
in the stories I read. As I tried to describe the war and the politics and the culture and the atrocities, I could not help but think that these things happened to this young boy while I was here, in America, well-fed, abundantly-loved, and spoiled rotten. I really did not want it to end. I wanted to read more about his life after Vietnam. I wanted to understand if and how he was able to put any of it in perspective and what lessons he took from it. I wanted to know about his brother, who obviously loved him immensely. I wanted to hear about his sister, who never had a chance. And I wanted to know how his mother adapted to life in America. Overall, an incredible story.
319 reviews1 follower
September 24, 2011
A really sad story told by a small boy growing up under the Communist Vietcong . He and his younger brother were the lowest of the low- an Amerasian- the progeny of an Asian mother and an American GI.

Again, I am astounded by the atrocities human beings heap upon one another ! This boy was never allowed a childhood-forced to grow up way too fast and endure one horror after another . In the end his family does escape to America- but I was left wondering what happened after that ???

Touching story that really demonstrates the resilience of children and the power of hope.
Profile Image for Jenna Montgomery.
41 reviews3 followers
February 13, 2012
The second half of the book held my attention more than the first half. The story was tragic and got more tragic with every page. However, I feel like Nguyen's story is similar to many people who have written memoirs about their impoverished childhoods in war torn countries. Nothing in his story is surprising, but sad nonetheless.

I was hoping to learn more about Vietnam from this book, and the author did give some insight into the fall of Saigon and the beginning of the Communist regime in the South, but it was more a story about his family.
Profile Image for Missy J.
629 reviews107 followers
March 24, 2021
Interesting book. Sometimes really painful to read. It's an autobiography and I sometimes have difficulties with that, wondering if it's really 100% true or not. Some interesting aspects I found: how Amerasians were given the opportunity to move back to the US and that some of the mixed people were actually not American, but French, the wisdom of Kien's grandparents (my favorite part in the book), the rivalry and jealousy between Kien's mom and his aunt (very sad). But overall, really a painful read.
2 reviews1 follower
July 8, 2009
This book is not for the faint of heart. However, I think everyone should read this. As he placed dates with “nightmarish” events in his life, I recalled how old I was, the house I lived in and child hood memories. A cultural experience of postwar Vietnam and a lesson of why our freedoms are so precious. A story you will not forget. The only memoir written by an Amerasain who lived through the fall of Saigon, at a young age, enduring life there for 13 years and who now lives in America.
Profile Image for Pat.
620 reviews3 followers
February 4, 2010
A heartbreaking trip back to the spoils of war--this time the Viet Nam
conflict is the setting as the Americans try to evacuate as many people as they can. Kien is the child of an American soldier and a Viet Namese mother and is the "unwanted" of the title. They miss the evacuation and the story recounts their hardships trying to get out of the country. My only criticism is I would have liked to know more about the author's eventual rescue and the people who raised him stateside.
Profile Image for Akila.
411 reviews101 followers
January 12, 2011
As with most memoirs, this book revealed a story that was painful and heart-wrenching, but more importantly, it showed the monstrosities of humanity and the power of hope and faith. A very short book to read and difficult to put down, Kien Nguyen has portrayed the difficulties of being an Amerasian in Communist Vietnam in the 70s. Beautifully written, a tale so poignant that it will haunt even the hard hearted.
Profile Image for Lisa.
1,720 reviews
March 21, 2011
Certainly this man had a horrific childhood. However, I cannot know what of the specific events are accurate. It is improbable at best that a 5 year old can recall full conversations and the dinner menu for a specific night. He has interpreted some events later as an adult but he would not have understood what was happening when they occurred. It isn't a very well written story and would have worked better as a novel rather than a liberally embellished "memoir".
Profile Image for Christine Carney.
69 reviews
April 29, 2011
An amazing and extremely powerful story about a young man and his family's struggles to survive in Vietnam after the fall of Saigon and his escape to America. From the start of the story I knew he and his family settled in America, but throughout the book I would find myself forgetting this and I would worry about his fate after every attempt to escape failed. I would love to see this book be required reading for high school seniors.
Profile Image for Jennifer .
40 reviews3 followers
March 24, 2009
Five stars for sure. The best book I've read since The Glass Castle. Some parts are extremely upsetting... but considering you will only be reading it while he had to live it, stay the course. Amazing, true story of an Amerasian child left in Vietnam when the American soldiers left and the Communists arrived.
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