


This bittersweet story balances social and intellectual pursuits against the strained relations of a family tapping roots into a new homeland, and it shows the emotions behind weighing cultural affiliations against the sway of progress and prosperity. Mai’s efforts to respect her beloved grandmother and all she represents are at odds with the allure of new friends and an exciting lifestyle. Grandma’s confusion over the day-to-day navigation through social-service agencies, stores, even church bazaars, makes her increasingly reliant on her granddaughter. Her aunt and uncle half-heartedly embrace Hmong tradition while feeling indebted to Christian charity. Her cousins have become rebellious, Americanized teens. Mai yearns for the life her cousins write about, a land of skyscrapers, Coke, and plenty of food, but her arrival in Rhode Island brings mixed reactions. As their departure for America nears, Grandma is withdrawn and always stitching away at her pa’ndau (story cloth). Her parents were killed in Laos and her grandmother carried her across the river to Thailand. Gr 6-9 –Mai, 13, is practicing her English in eager anticipation of leaving the crowded Thai refugee camp where she and her grandmother have lived for 10 years.
