Andrew Lam is a Vietnamese American writer. He was born South Vietnam. His father is General Lâm Quang Thi of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam. In April 1975, Lam left Vietnam during the Fall of Saigon with his family. He attend UC Berkeley, and then decided to be a writer. Lam has written many factual stories about the United States' involvement in Vietnam. He currently is the editor of the Pacific News Service. He is also a journalist and short story writer. Wikipedia
This essay, originally written for Pacific News Service, was anthologized in 'New To North America,' a colection of writng by U.S. immigrants, their children and grandchildren. Here it is shortened for NPR's All Things Considered. www.pacificnews.org/contributors/lam/kieu.html
No. So, anyway dude was lame for a whole week and couldn't even tell people that a girl shot him with a damn piece of candy. www.pacificnews.org/contributors/lam/slingshot.html
The definitive Wikipedia entry for Andrew Lam. Wikipedia is the biggest multilingual free-content encyclopedia on the Internet. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Lam
Jump to: navigation , search Andrew Lam (born 1964) is a fiction writer and essayist, writing in English. www.vietnamlit.org/wiki/index.php?title=Andrew_Lam
The lesson American documentary film makers have yet to learn about Vietnam is that Vietnam is not fourteen years old. Barbara Sonneborn's film "Regret to Inform" is no exception, writes PNS editor Andrew Lam, who found the film bore little res www.pacificnews.org/jinn/stories/6.02/000125-regret.html
...by Andrew Lam 1 2 3 4 Almost three decades ago, my family and I left Vietnam inside a C-130 cargo plane full of weeping refugees. I remember watching a Saigon... www.pbs.org/weta/myjourneyhome/andrew/
December 17, 2002: Andrew attends the Saigon premiere of "The Quiet American," a movie about the Vietnam war. www.pbs.org/weta/myjourneyhome/andrew/andrew_video.html