Jade Ngoc Quang Huynh
Jade Ngoc Quang Huynh (1957) is a Vietnamese-American writer, known first for his memoir South Wind Changing (1994).
Born in the Mekong Delta, he attended Saigon University until he was sent to a communist "reeducation camp." He escaped Vietnam in 1977, first to Thailand and then to the United States, and worked as a laborer for six years. He completed his B.A. at Bennington College and earned an M.F.A. from Brown University.
South Wind Changing (Graywolf Press, 1994), a memoir of his family during wartime, his survival of prison camp, his escape attempts, and his struggle to resettle in the United States, was short-listed for the National Book Award and was a Time Magazine Non-Fiction Book of the Year for 1994. His works and translations have been anthologized in Tilting the Continent: Southeast Asian American Writing (2000), Screaming Monkeys: Critiques of Asian American Images (2003), and Time It Was: American Stories from the Sixties and Beyond (2007). He coedited Voices of Vietnamese Boat People: Nineteen Narratives of Escape and Survival (2001).
Hai-Dang Phan started this entry.
Reference
- Author biography at Starborn Books
Jade Ngoc Quang Huynh online
- Chapter 2 of South Wind Changing at Graywolf Press
- "Fleeing Vietnam", a New York Times review of South Wind Changing by George Packer
- Authors
- Memoirists
- Memoirists of exile
- Memoirists of exile in the United States
- Memoirists of war in Viet Nam
- Working in English
- Memoirists composing in English
- Memoirists of exile composing in English
- Memoirists of exile in the United States composing in English
- Memoirists of war in Viet Nam composing in English
- Born 1950-1959
- Man
- Man born 1950-1959
- Entries started by Hai-Dang Phan