About the Author:
Wendy Law-Yone is the author of The Road to Wanting, Irrawaddy Tango, and The Coffin Tree. Her short stories have appeared in Grand Street and literary anthologies, and her book reviews and articles have been published in the Times Literary Supplement, the Washington Post, Atlantic Monthly, Architectural Digest, and Time Magazine. Her awards and honors include a National Endowment for the Arts creative writing fellowship, a Harvard Foundation award, and a David T. K. Wong creative writing fellowship at the University of East Anglia in Norwich. She lives in London.
Review:
A rich portrait of a family equally rich in spirit and mind, and for those of us less familiar with the complicated history of Burma... the book serves as a fast-paced yet thorough crash course in Burma's postcolonial politics. (Mia Warren Asian Review of Books)
An unexpectedly delightful memoir... compelling yet delicate. (John Keay Literary Review)
Beautifully written with a keen sense of humor, [this] book is bound to become a classic in the genre of personal books written about modern Myanmar.... [Wendy Law-Yone] has done her famous journalist and rebel father justice in a volume that is a must-read for anyone interested in modern Myanmar history (Bertil Lintner Asia Times)
Weaving together events she witnessed and those gleaned from her father's papers, Law-Yone gracefully conveys the dramatic story of her youth, her family, and a remarkable man's life and work. (Kirkus Reviews)
Gorgeous: vivid, precise and awash in remembered sunlight. (Independent on Sunday)
An engaging and enjoyable read.... It is poignant and touching, and manages to skillfully convey a sense of the personalities involved in these key episodes of Burmese history. (Hans Rollman PopMatters)
Wendy Law-Yone's personal account of exile, arrest, and a failed attempt at revolution outlines contemporary Burmese history. (World Literature Today)
An important testimony to the almost unbelievable courage, determination and patience of those who choose a hazardous path of political dissent in the face of state tyranny and oppression. (Denis Judd Times Literary Supplement)
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