Andrew Lam

Andrew Lam (born 1964) is a Vietnamese American author and journalist who has written about the Overseas Vietnamese experience.

Andrew Lam
Lam reading in 2017
Born
Lâm Quang Dũng[1]

1964 (1964) (age 56)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materLycée Yersin
University of California, Berkeley
San Francisco State University
OccupationWriter and journalist
RelativesLam Quang Thi (father)

Biography

Andrew Lam was born Lâm Quang Dũng in 1964 in South Vietnam.[1] He led a privileged life as the son of General Lâm Quang Thi of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam. He attended Lycée Yersin in Đà Lạt.[2]

Lam left Vietnam with his family during the fall of Saigon in April 1975. He attended the University of California, Berkeley where he majored in biochemistry. He soon abandoned plans for medical school and entered a creative writing program at San Francisco State University. While still in school he began writing for Pacific News Service and in 1993 won the Outstanding Young Journalist Award from the Society of Professional Journalists.[3]

A PBS documentary produced by WETA in 2004, My Journey Home, told 3 stories of Americans returning to their ancestral homelands, including of Lam's return to Vietnam.[4]

He is currently the web editor of New America Media.[5] He is also a journalist and short story writer. In 2005, he published a collection of essays, Perfume Dreams, about the problem of identity as a Vietnamese living in the U.S.[6] Lam received the PEN/Beyond Margins Award in 2006 for Perfume Dreams: Reflections on the Vietnamese Diaspora. He is a regular contributor to National Public Radio's All Things Considered. His second book, East Eats West: Writing in Two Hemispheres is a meditation on East-West relations, and how Asian immigration changed the West. It was named Top Ten Indies by Shelf Unbound Magazine in 2010.

Birds of Paradise Lost, his third book, is a collection of short stories about Vietnamese newcomers struggling to remake their lives in the San Francisco Bay after a long, painful exodus from Vietnam.[7]

Lam blogs regularly on Huffington Post.[8]

He was a John S. Knight Journalism Fellow at Stanford University 2001-2002.

Though reticent about speaking about his sexuality, in 2009 Lam gave an interview for a collection of portraits of homosexual Americans.[9]

Publications

Books

Essays

Fiction

Short Stories "Show and Tell"

Quotes

  • "Art is the lesser sister to medicine. It aims to heal."

Notes

  1. Lê Hải (April 21, 2009). "Những giấc mơ trên sông Hương" [Dreams on the Perfume River]. BBC News Vietnamese (in Vietnamese). BBC News. Retrieved June 30, 2018.
  2. Philip Gambone, Travels in a Gay Nation: Portraits of LGBTQ Americans (University of Wisconsin Press, 2010), 194-5
  3. Gambone, 197
  4. PBS: "Andrew Lam", accessed June 23, 2010; My Journey Home, accessed June 23, 2010
  5. "New America Media". "New America Media". Archived from the original on 2019-02-19. Retrieved 2013-12-04.
  6. Heyday Books: "Perfume Dreams: Reflections on the Vietnamese Diaspora", accessed June 23, 2010
  7. "Birds of Paradise Lost | Red Hen Press". Redhen.org. Retrieved 2013-12-04.
  8. "Andrew Lam". Huffingtonpost.com. Retrieved 2013-12-04.
  9. Gambone, 194-9
gollark: Also worse health conditions because no medicine.
gollark: No convenient transport, no automation, basically zero economy, no modern computers and networking, manual labour all day because no automation...
gollark: Oh [REDACTED], that would be HORRIBLE.
gollark: Without the global supply chains we have I would lack nice things like computers or possibly orange juice.
gollark: I don't agree, trade is generally pretty positive-sum for everyone.
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