Description
Author: Jennifer H. Lau
Publisher: Lotus Book Group
Published: 10/13/2016
Pages: 366
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.92lbs
Size: 7.99h x 5.24w x 0.82d
ISBN13: 9780998079899
ISBN10: 0998079898
BISAC Categories:
- History | Asia | Southeast Asia
- Biography & Autobiography | Personal Memoirs
- Political Science | Political Ideologies | Communism, Post-Communism & Socialism
About the Author
Jennifer H. Lau was born in Cambodia in 1970, the third of seven children. She was only five when the Khmer Rouge forcibly relocated her family, friends and neighbors to live and work in one giant concentration camp. She endured four long years of living in perpetual fear, under constant threat of execution, disease, and starvation. Her daily survival often depended on finding the next drop of water, the next grain of rice. Finally arriving in America at age twelve, illiterate and traumatized, Jennifer forged on - neither willing to accept these setbacks nor to let her former oppressors dictate her future. In addition to working full-time alongside her family to contribute to a fragile new beginning, she also pursued her education with great fervor, endeavoring to learn how to survive the enigmatic first-world challenges of her new country. Her keen understanding of the harsh realities of a struggling nation served her well in her studies at the University of California, Irvine, where she earned dual degrees in Chinese and Chinese Literature, and Economics. Today, as a Certified Public Accountant, Jennifer Lau owns and runs Topp and Lau accounting firm, where she is proud to contribute to society by assisting individuals, businesses, and charitable organizations. She lives in Orange County, California with her husband and their two children. Having early on been deprived of education herself, Jennifer contributes both time and money to her immediate and extended communities to combat illiteracy. She hopes her story of sorrow and survival inspires readers from all walks of life in their own struggles and successes. She provides this firsthand account of the Khmer Rouge atrocities for future generations to study in the hope to shed light into a dark time. Her greatest fear is that history will repeat itself if we don't learn from it. Revolution everywhere in the world just doesn't happen overnight.
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