A finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, Duong Van Mai Elliott's The Sacred
Willow illuminates recent Vietnamese history by weaving together the
stories of the lives of four generations of her family. Beginning with
her great-grandfather, who rose from rural poverty to become an
influential landowner, and continuing to the present, Mai Elliott traces
her family's journey through an era of tumultuous change. She tells us
of childhood hours in her grandmother's silk shop, and of hiding while
French troops torched her village, watching while blossoms torn by fire
from the trees flutter "like hundreds of butterflies" overhead. She
makes clear the agonizing choices that split Vietnamese families: her
eldest sister left her staunchly anti-communist home to join the Viet
Minh, and spent months sleeping in jungle camps with her infant son,
fearing air raids by day and tigers by night. And she follows several
family members through the last, desperate hours of the fall of
Saigon-including one
nephew who tried to escape by grabbing the skid of a departing American
helicopter. Based on family papers, dozens of interviews, and a wealth
of other research, this is not only a memorable family saga but a record
of how the Vietnamese themselves have experienced their times.