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Useful Phrases for Immigrants, winner of a 2019 American Book Award, 
and Tomorrow in Shanghai & Other Stories are  now available from Blair







Tiger Girl


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Tiger Girl continues the story of Nea Chhim, who is first introduced in the novel, Dragon Chica.

Nea is struggling with college. Nightmares of war flood the waking memories of this 19-year-old survivor of the Cambodian Killing Fields. Nea decides she must confront the past to overcome her fear and begin her own life in America.

Without telling Ma, she hops on a cross-country bus in Nebraska to see her biological father in Southern California. There Nea comes face to face with a man wounded by survivor’s guilt who refuses to acknowledge the family’s secrets. Nea decides to revive his struggling donut shop and help him recover. Her tireless efforts attract a mysterious young man’s attention–is he casing the place for a gang? It is up to Nea to find out the truth: about her family, the war that nearly destroyed them, and herself. Tiger Girl weaves together Cambodian folklore and its painful past with contemporary American life to create an unforgettable novel about love, war, and acceptance.


Awards & Reviews

Winner of the 2014 Asian/Pacific American Award for Literature, Best Young Adult Novel, from APALA (the Asian/Pacific American Librarians Association).

“Nineteen-year-old Khmer Rouge survivor and Cambodian refugee Nea Chhim sets out to uncover a lifetime of lies in this quietly powerful sequel to Chai’s Dragon Chica (2010).”
     Kirkus Reviews

“…a masterful storyteller with a poignant and gripping tale to tell. Tiger Girl travels far and wide, but in the end it’s about families – not just the ones we’re born into but also the ones we make for ourselves. Enthralling and moving and fascinating and absolutely wonderful.”
Claire LaZebnik, author of If You Lived Here, You’d Be Home Now and Families and Other Nonreturnable Gifts.

“…captures the melancholy of growing up Khmer and misunderstood in America. Tiger Girl disrupts the silence that exists between Cambodian first generation children and their traumatized refugee parents.”
Laura Tevary Mam, singer/composer, Pka Proheam Popreay (Morning Flowers Blossoming)


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