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In the Shadow of the Banyan (Bound for Schools & Libraries)
In the Shadow of the Banyan (Bound for Schools & Libraries) | Vaddey Ratner
38 posts | 42 read | 53 to read
For seven-year-old Raami, the shattering end of childhood begins with the footsteps of her father returning home in the early dawn hours bringing details of the civil war that has overwhelmed the streets of Phnom Penh, Cambodia's capital. Soon the family's world of carefully guarded royal privilege is swept up in the chaos of revolution and forced exodus. Over the next four years, Raami clings to the only remaining vestige of her childhood--the mythical legends and poems told to her by her father--and fights for her improbable survival. Displaying the author's extraordinary gift for language, In the Shadow of the Banyan is a brilliantly wrought tale of hope and transcendence.
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tokorowilliamwallace
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So my categories for June's #bookspin and #doublespin are a selection involving a South Asian/AAPI author, character, or context, and to catch up on my BOTM backlog, so I was thinking of starting with my last order from April. But I also do have options which could cover both categories. A poll? My current library read is not by a diverse author but is set in Malaya and Singapore around the time of the Japanese invasion of British territory there.

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BarbaraTheBibliophage
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Pickpick

Set in the time of the Khmer Revolution, this fictional piece draws from the author‘s life. It‘s slow, poetic, and deeply sad. And brutally violent. Coming-of-age in a horrific authoritarian regime.

Full review https://www.TheBibliophage.com #thebibliophage2022 #readingasia2021 #cambodia #belatedchallenge

Librarybelle Sounds very powerful 3y
BarbaraTheBibliophage @Librarybelle Yes, but not easy to listen to … 😥😥 3y
BarbaraBB Such a dark, dark time for Cambodia 3y
BarbaraTheBibliophage @BarbaraBB Definitely. And very well told from a young girl‘s perspective. 3y
85 likes3 stack adds4 comments
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DGRachel
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Pickpick

After an extremely slow start, I began to connect to the story around 2/3s of the way through. Knowing this is about one girl‘s experience and survival of the Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia in the late 1970s, I knew it would be heartbreaking. Thankfully, because it‘s seen through a child‘s eyes, it isn‘t as graphic as I feared. The author‘s afterword is beautiful and I cried through the entire thing. Don‘t skip it. #readingasia2021 #cambodia

Lcsmcat I loved this book! 3y
MicheleinPhilly I have had this book for YEARS. I really should get to it. 3y
DGRachel @Lcsmcat I admit I didn‘t love it, but I did think it was well written. I just really struggled with the slow beginning and my fear that it was going to be graphic. 3y
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DGRachel @MicheleinPhilly I bought it in February or April of 2019 and it would probably still be sitting on my shelf unread if not for the #readingasia2021 challenge. I was scared of the topic, TBH. 3y
Librarybelle Great review! 3y
BarbaraBB Sounds awful but very good! 🥲 3y
45 likes2 stack adds6 comments
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stretchkev
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Pickpick

A heartbreaking story of a Cambodian family caught up the disastrous social engineering of the Khmer Rogue in the mid 70s.

Ratner uses lines of poetry/flowery prose to create a serene atmosphere that is completely counters the devastation within the story. I liked the narrator is not the typical precocious wise child, her account reads like a child forced to grow up by her conditions. This is a beautifully written and heartbreaking account.

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ReadingEnvy
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Pickpick

This is the last book of 2019, just under the wire to squeeze one more Asian country in there. This incredible and poetic novel is parallel to the author‘s lived experience of an idyllic early childhood descended from royalty in Cambodia cut short by being forced from her home and into work camps, and surviving the genocide that killed 1/4-1/3 of the population in the country. Definitely read the end matter in this book.

50 likes5 stack adds
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Booksnob
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2nd time reading this. It‘s more beautiful and heart breaking the second time.

15 likes1 stack add
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Lcsmcat
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Amiable I have this one in my TBR pile but haven‘t read it yet. Good? 5y
Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks Love the cover!! 5y
Lcsmcat @Amiable Yes! It will break your heart, but I highly recommend it. 5y
OriginalCyn620 👌🏻📚🖤 5y
39 likes5 comments
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Jess861
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Pickpick

A heartbreaking autobiography fictional book that will make you cry and feel anger that we could treat each other as such. There is also happiness that others can come together even in the hardest of times. I learned a lot about the Cambodian revolution (something on which I didn't know much). Beautifully written from the eyes of a child - this read will get you right in the heart.

#HistoricalFiction #Autobiography #VaddeyRatner #JustFinished

Lcsmcat I loved this one too. 5y
28 likes2 stack adds1 comment
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Lcsmcat
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There should be plenty of #shade Under the Shadow of the Banyan. #LetsTravelJuly @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks @OriginalCyn620

wanderinglynn What an awesome tree! 💚 5y
OriginalCyn620 Great photo! 💚 5y
Lcsmcat @wanderinglynn @OriginalCyn620 I can‘t claim credit. It‘s from a botany site online. Banyans don‘t grow where I live. 5y
OriginalCyn620 @Lcsmcat Well, I don‘t think they grow where I live but I wish they did! 😊 5y
44 likes4 comments
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Lcsmcat
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This book will break your heart and open your eyes and totally engross you. #shadow #anewchapter @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks @vkois88

mreads Looks amazing- stacked! 6y
ofbooksandme Well, with that mini review you totally sold it to me! Stacked! 6y
Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks Love the cover too! 6y
vkois88 Looks beautiful 6y
56 likes6 stack adds4 comments
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jveezer
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The power in love, words, stories, and humanity.

Leftcoastzen That is so beautiful! 6y
3 likes1 comment
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jveezer
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A break in holiday meal prep for a chapter and some tea.... Happy & healthy Holidays to all beings. #BooksAndTea #tea #holidays #WomenWriters #ReadWide #metta

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alisonrose
Pickpick

This is an utterly gutting book, all the more so because it‘s basically the author‘s life you‘re reading about. But she manages to write so beautifully about something so painful and harrowing, and you definitely won‘t come away from it unaffected. I also appreciated that even though the narrator is 7 years old at the beginning, it‘s not written in that simplistic language people sometimes use for young narrators. A tough read but worth it. 4/5 ⭐️

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alisonrose

Words, you see, allow us to make permanent what is essentially transient.

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alisonrose
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What else should you read after a book totally demolished your heart but another book that will probably totally demolish your heart?? #nowreading

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Cinfhen
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#DecDays This an autobiographical novel about Raami, a 7-year-old with polio, torn from her extended royal family in the mid-1970s during the Khmer Rouge regime. Beautifully written, full of hope & despair as she longs to return #underneaththetree of her childhood home😞Happy Holidays to all who celebrate 🤶🏼🎅🏻🎄🕊may we all find peace, joy & tranquility this coming year❤️

DebinHawaii The book sounds really good.👍 Wishing you the happiest of holidays and much peace, love and joy. 💙❤️💚 7y
Cinfhen 😘😘😘😘 @DebinHawaii 7y
mrp27 This is another one that's been sitting on my tbr for awhile now. 7y
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Cinfhen It starts slow @mrp27 but it's really interesting piece of history I was not familiar with. Read it with my bookclub a few years ago. 7y
mrp27 That's what interests me the most about the book, the history. The author just came out with another one, the title escapes me right now but, that one looks interesting history wise as well. 7y
Megabooks What a wonderful wish for us all! May it become true! 🧡🧡🧡 7y
Cinfhen Need to investigate @mrp27 I would like to read another book by this author ! I think this might be the book 7y
TrishB Lovely pick ❤️ 7y
Cathythoughts Thankyou 🙏 7y
emilyhaldi You always have a good, random pick to share! #stacked And Happy Holidays to you!!! Hope you find time to read and rest among all of your hosting duties ❤️ (edited) 7y
Cinfhen Thanks @emilyhaldi my brain works in weird and random ways 😂😬😘 7y
ScientistSam Such a good book! 7y
ElishaLovesBooks Stacking! 7y
mrp27 Yes! That's it. 7y
DivineDiana Love this photo of Kelly! And My sentiments exactly! ❤️ 7y
135 likes6 stack adds15 comments
review
ScientistSam
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Pickpick

Beautiful, evocative, heart-rending. Vaddey Ratner wrote a work of autobiographical fiction detailing one child's existence during the forced relocations, mass starvation, and reeducation programs of the Khmer Rouge.

I've visited the killing fields of Cambodia and they are terrible and tragic. This book brings it to life and bears witness to the horrors. At the same time, it is a beautiful homage to her family and Cambodian people.

ScientistSam Works for #readharder2017 #readharderchallenge for a book more than 5000 miles away 7y
45 likes3 stack adds1 comment
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ScientistSam

"Memory is a sickness, they told me, and I was full of it. I needed to be cured."

Reminds me of Soviet Russia and how they erased the memory of people existing, as described in The Commissar Vanishes or Lenin's Tomb.

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ScientistSam
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This book is beautiful and it's breaking my heart.

CareBear I loved this one 7y
ScientistSam @CareBear I can see why! It's dark but at this point I can't put it down to pick up something lighter. Social media breaks will have to do for now, so I can absorb it fully 7y
40 likes1 stack add2 comments
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ScientistSam

I told you stories to give you wings, Raami, so that you would never be trapped by anything - your name, your title, the limits of your body, this world's suffering.

SoniaC I love this book so much. It's sad and beautiful. 7y
ScientistSam @SoniaC So glad you enjoyed it! I'm at a part where I want to cry my eyes out. So evocative of such a terrible time in Cambodia's history. 7y
SoniaC @ScientistSam absolutely heartbreaking. I actually know someone who lived through it. He was six when his father was killed and him his mom and sisters taken into captivity. It was a dark time. 7y
ScientistSam @SoniaC oh wow. Yes, an incredibly dark time. I visited Cambodia a few years ago and remember talking to a guide about what it was like. I cannot begin to imagine what it was like for your friend and his family. 7y
28 likes4 comments
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heikemarie
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Book Outlet 😱

I'm so excited about this #bookhaul!!

KCorter OOH, that looks like a good haul! The Golem and the Jinni is next on my TBR as well. 😊 7y
Yeah_I_Read In the shadow of the banyan was really good but difficult subject matter. Before I read this I had a vague idea of the Khmer Rouge and the genocide in Cambodia but this book graphically described what the people really went through. 7y
heikemarie @Yeah_I_Read Yes, I have really been looking forward to it - which feels weird to say given the subject matter. (edited) 7y
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heikemarie @KCorter it's been there forever! It sitting in the house should help move things along :) 7y
jfalkens I just got my third book outlet order today 😊📚📚 7y
jfalkens @inwhichHeikereadsharder the Golem and the Jinni is fantastic 😀 I hope you enjoy it 😊 7y
heikemarie @jfalkens I need to forget Book@Outlet ever existed before my husband divorces me 😅😅😅 7y
jfalkens @inwhichHeikereadsharder me too 😂 order 3 broke my book buying ban that was supposed to last til Oct 😱 7y
Foragingfantasy The book of speculation! ❤️ 7y
Foragingfantasy @inwhichHeikereadsharder what's your goodreads user name? I wanna stalk you because your tbr on here is tiny. 😏😜😂 7y
heikemarie @Foragingfantasy I've been meaning to read that one forever!! 7y
heikemarie @Foragingfantasy my username is heikemarie! Not tiny there 😅I'm in the middle of organizing it! 7y
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Leelee.reads
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Pickpick

I still understand very little about the madness that was the Khmer Rouge. Maybe there is no understanding it. This book was hard to get into at first, and reading about atrocities at the hands of fellow humans is difficult, but I'm glad I read it. The author's personal story is brutal, but her strength of spirit is inspiring and the reflections toward the end are lovely, offering hope in the face of absurdity and atrocities.

aeeklund Her new one is amazing, too. 7y
47 likes3 stack adds1 comment
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Lcsmcat
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25 likes1 stack add
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bookishkai
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Thanks for all the suggestions for vacation reading! I've already read most of the books you all recommended (maybe I need to stop reading so much?) I went browsing today and picked these three. Now, if I can keep from reading them before my trip . . .

Dragon Just heard Outlander is on Netflix here so I'm going to have to rewatch it. Really enjoyed 8y
minkyb Enjoy! 8y
81 likes2 comments
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GinEyre22
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#aprilbookshowers Day 11: Set in Southeast Asia

BookishMarginalia What a lovely cover! 8y
18 likes1 stack add1 comment
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Liatrek
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#aprilbookshowers books set in Southeast Asia. Currently in my TBR pile.

21 likes1 stack add
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Lcsmcat
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It's not a beach read, but Cambodia is about as far away as you can get. #farawayplace #springflingreading I read this as part of my #diverse reads and learned a lot about the Khmer Rouge and Cambodia under their rule, told from the experience of a small girl.

howjessicareads I've read a few books in a Cambodian mystery series that were really good! 8y
20 likes1 comment
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MicheleinPhilly
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#MarchIntoReading #MarchTBR 3 of these are already in progress. I'm going to participate in #MarchinMarch and knock out my "R" choice for #LitsyAtoZ. I'd also like to read Allegedly this month. Other than that, ??‍♀️.

Reviewsbylola The March trilogy is great. 8y
57 likes1 stack add1 comment
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Lcsmcat
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I read this quite a while back, but it's the only "shadow" I could find. And a great #diverseread #ownvoices pick also. #FeistyFeb #shadows

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MicheleinPhilly
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#FeistyFeb I took the #Shadows prompt literally as I'm not quite awake enough to go look for a cover with actual shadows on it. Another one from the #TBR mountain.

LitHousewife I enjoyed this book. I read it at the beach and then left the ARC in the hotel library. Hopefully at least one other person loved it, too. 8y
MicheleinPhilly I've heard such wonderful things about it and I have an ARC of her latest so I really should get to this. 8y
Sparkpuppypup I've had this on my Kindle for ages. We should all read it together. 😊 8y
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MicheleinPhilly @Sparkpuppypup I'm down with that idea! 8y
Sparkpuppypup @MicheleinPhilly Yay! I've got a ton of books lined up that I want to read for Black History Month, but how about in March? Let me know, and I can add it to my notes so I remember....Oooo, it'll be so fun! 😊📚❤️ 8y
57 likes6 comments
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Nomad_Student
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"Milk Mother said that stories are like footpaths of the gods. They lead us back and forth across time and space and connect us to the entire universe, to people and beings we never see but who we feel exist." The beauty of this story, its language, the Khmer history and myth it shares, shines through the horrors it recounts. If stories have souls, this one's is a bright, shimmering wish for the best of our humanity. #readwomen #weneeddiversebooks

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Readingrobin
Mehso-so

It's not entirely fair giving this so-so because it's an important and overlooked time period in recent history dealing with the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia. This work of fiction is based on real events in the author's life. My reluctance to fully endorse this book is that I wanted more of an omniscient narrator so I could really know why these events were happening.

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Readingrobin
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Novel based on real events from the author's life. Not an easy or fun book to read. Will discuss this week at Bookclub so need to finish.

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SoniaC
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#day7 #somethingforsept #mademecry loved these books. They were all amazing and so worth the read. Still find myself thinking of them.

Graciouswarriorprincess Great choices! I loved Eleanor and Park too! 8y
RealLifeReading I loved In The Shadow of the Banyan! 8y
SoniaC @RealLifeReading so beautifully written. 8y
46 likes4 comments
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MelissaThorn
Mehso-so

Good, not great.

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Sfox414
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My book club went on an #innocencebook streak earlier this year and I really liked these two. In The Shadow of the Banyan is about a young girl's experiences under the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia, and When the Moon is Low is about a mother and her children fleeing Afghanistan and their time spent as refugees. They're both excellent. #augustofpages

21 likes2 stack adds1 comment