My Father, the Panda Killer, Jamie Jo Hoang
My Father, the Panda Killer, Jamie Jo Hoang
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My Father, the Panda Killer

Author: Jamie Jo Hoang

Narrator: Quyen Ngo

Unabridged: 10 hr 16 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 08/29/2023


Synopsis

A poignant coming-of-age story told in two alternating voices: a California teenager railing against the Vietnamese culture, juxtaposed with her father as an eleven-year-old boat person on a harrowing and traumatic refugee journey from Vietnam to the United States.

“A profoundly moving, achingly resonant story of love, family, and coming of age amid the lingering echoes of war; a luminous tapestry woven from the many threads of American dreams.”

―Jeff Zentner, award-winning author of The Serpent King and In the Wild Light

San Jose, 1999. Jane knows her Vietnamese dad can’t control his temper. Lost in a stupid daydream, she forgot to pick up her seven-year-old brother, Paul, from school. Inside their home, she hands her dad the stick he hits her with. This is how it’s always been. She deserves this. Not because she forgot to pick up Paul, but because at the end of the summer she’s going to leave him when she goes away to college. As Paul retreats inward, Jane realizes she must explain where their dad’s anger comes from. The problem is, she doesn’t quite understand it herself.

Đà Nẵng, 1975. Phúc (pronounced /fo͞ok/, rhymes with duke) is eleven the first time his mother walks him through a field of mines he’s always been warned never to enter. Guided by cracks of moonlight, Phúc moves past fallen airplanes and battle debris to a refugee boat. But before the sun even has a chance to rise, more than half the people aboard will perish. This is only the beginning of Phúc’s perilous journey across the Pacific, which will be fraught with Thai pirates, an unrelenting ocean, starvation, hallucination, and the unfortunate murder of a panda.

Told in the alternating voices of Jane and Phúc, My Father, The Panda Killer is an unflinching story about war and its impact across multiple generations, and how one American teenager forges a path toward accepting her heritage and herself.

About The Author

Jamie Jo Hoang, the daughter of Vietnamese refugees, grew up in Orange County, CA—not the wealthy part. She worked for MGM Studios and later, as a docu-series producer. Now she writes novels and blogs full time. When Jamie’s not writing, she’s wandering, pondering, and chasing experiences. Her self-published first novel, Blue Sun, Yellow Sky, is a Kirkus Reviews Best Book of the Year.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Mai

The generational trauma is strong here. As you well know, I just about request every Vietnamese diaspora book. And I will 100% request anything where the author shares my surname. Helen Hoang, Jolie Hoang, and Brandon Hoàng, what what? I nearly took off another star for the pain this made me feel, bu......more

TITLE: MY FATHER THE PANDA KILLER AUTHOR: Jamie Jo Hoang PUB DATE: 08.29.2023 Now Available MY FATHER THE PANDA KILLER is one phenomenal read that gutted me from the very first page. The story is told through alternating view points of Jane’s story in 1999, the summer before she starts college at UCLA......more

Goodreads review by Sandra

Full thoughts/review here: [URL not allowed] A very hard story about identity, trauma and abuse. I missed some commections between the chapters, but still a solid read. 3.5/4.......more

*Thank you Netgalley and RHCBEducators for this eARC in exchange for an honest review!* Posted to: NetGalley, Goodreads, and The StoryGraph Posted on: 4 June 2023 4.8 (rounded up to 5) out of 5 stars. This review took me some days to get around to solely for the fact that I couldn’t begin to gather my w......more


Quotes

★ "An important book, highly recommended for high school and public libraries." —School Library Journal, starred review

"A gripping and difficult story of a family surviving abuse." —Kirkus Reviews

"Lush storytelling...a riveting intergenerational drama." —Publishers Weekly

"Hoang does a skillful job in capturing multigenerational trauma with Jane's teenage angst and Phúc's damaging voyage." The Horn Book