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Main Author: Wiggins, Joy L.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ748623
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author Wiggins, Joy L.
author_facet Wiggins, Joy L.
Wiggins, Joy L.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Minfong Ho: Politics in Prose Wiggins, Joy L. Interviews Authors Novels Asian Culture Childrens Literature Adolescent Literature Writing Processes Political Issues Cultural Background Ethnic Groups Language Role In this article, the author interviews Minfong Ho, an award-winning Thai writer of children's and young adult novels. Ho was born in Burma to Chinese parents in 1951, raised in Singapore and Thailand, educated in Bangkok, Taiwan, and at Cornell University in New York. Ho's first novel, "Sing to the Dawn," won first prize from the Council of Interracial Books for Children, and another novel, "Rice without Rain," was recognized by the American Library Association as a Best Books for Young Adults and as a "Booklist" Editor's Choice. From strong female characters surviving in politically turbulent times to the realizations of two brothers' spiritual destiny's, Ho's works prove to be powerful, insightful, and timeless. By threading the themes of love, courage, and family through her stories, Ho carefully guides readers through such difficult subjects as poverty and violence. Ho's novels provide unparalleled insight into the culture of Southeast Asia. In the interview, Ho discusses what it means to be a "Third Culture Kid," responses she has received from children about her novels, her experiences that helped shape her characters, her views about politics in Cambodia now compared to the time she wrote about it, what she wants American children to know about the cultures represented in her novels, and her different approaches to writing picture books, short stories, and novels. The article concludes by stating that Ho's works are not only insightful, but are politically and socially necessary, and the strengths, struggles, and survival skills of the Southeast Asian child are dramatically told.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ748623
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2006
record_format eric
spellingShingle Minfong Ho: Politics in Prose
Wiggins, Joy L.
Interviews
Authors
Novels
Asian Culture
Childrens Literature
Adolescent Literature
Writing Processes
Political Issues
Cultural Background
Ethnic Groups
Language Role
Minfong Ho: Politics in Prose Wiggins, Joy L. Interviews Authors Novels Asian Culture Childrens Literature Adolescent Literature Writing Processes Political Issues Cultural Background Ethnic Groups Language Role In this article, the author interviews Minfong Ho, an award-winning Thai writer of children's and young adult novels. Ho was born in Burma to Chinese parents in 1951, raised in Singapore and Thailand, educated in Bangkok, Taiwan, and at Cornell University in New York. Ho's first novel, "Sing to the Dawn," won first prize from the Council of Interracial Books for Children, and another novel, "Rice without Rain," was recognized by the American Library Association as a Best Books for Young Adults and as a "Booklist" Editor's Choice. From strong female characters surviving in politically turbulent times to the realizations of two brothers' spiritual destiny's, Ho's works prove to be powerful, insightful, and timeless. By threading the themes of love, courage, and family through her stories, Ho carefully guides readers through such difficult subjects as poverty and violence. Ho's novels provide unparalleled insight into the culture of Southeast Asia. In the interview, Ho discusses what it means to be a "Third Culture Kid," responses she has received from children about her novels, her experiences that helped shape her characters, her views about politics in Cambodia now compared to the time she wrote about it, what she wants American children to know about the cultures represented in her novels, and her different approaches to writing picture books, short stories, and novels. The article concludes by stating that Ho's works are not only insightful, but are politically and socially necessary, and the strengths, struggles, and survival skills of the Southeast Asian child are dramatically told.
title Minfong Ho: Politics in Prose
topic Interviews
Authors
Novels
Asian Culture
Childrens Literature
Adolescent Literature
Writing Processes
Political Issues
Cultural Background
Ethnic Groups
Language Role
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ748623