Read Inside Out and Back Again Online
Authors: Thanhha Lai
January 17
I’m trying to tell
MiSSSisss WaSShington
about our ceremony for Father.
But it takes time to
match every noun and verb,
sort all the tenses,
remember all the articles,
set the tone for every
s
.
MiSSSisss WaSShington says
if every learner waits
to speak perfectly,
no one would learn
a new language.
Being stubborn
won’t make you fluent.
Practicing will!
The more mistakes you make,
the more you’ll learn not to.
They laugh.
Shame on them!
Challenge them to say
something in Vietnamese
and laugh right back.
I tell her
Father is at peace.
I tell her
I’d like to plant
flowers from
Vietnam
in her backyard.
I tell her
T
t is coming
and luck starts over
every new year.
January 19
Brother Quang
has started night school
to restudy engineering
to become what
he was meant to be.
Mother smiles.
Vu Lee
refuses to apply to a real college,
instead will go to a cooking school
in San-fran-cis-co,
where his idol once walked.
Mother sighs,
twists her brows
to no effect.
Brother Khôi
announces he will become a doctor
of animals.
Mother starts to say something,
then nods.
Mother has always wanted
an engineer, a real doctor, a poet,
and a lawyer.
She turns to me.
You love to argue, right?
No I don’t.
She brightens.
I vow to become
much more agreeable.
January 29
This T
t
there’s no I Ching Teller of Fate,
so Mother predicts our year.
Our lives
will twist and twist,
intermingling the old and the new
until it doesn’t matter
which is which.
This T
t
there’s no
bánh ch
ng
in the shape of a square,
made of pork,
glutinous rice,
and mung beans,
wrapped in banana leaves.
Mother makes her own
in the shape of a log,
made of pork,
regular rice,
and black beans,
wrapped in cloth.
Not the same,
but not bad.
As with every T
t
we are expected to
smile until it hurts
all three first days
of the year,
wear all new clothes
especially underneath,
not sweep,
not splash water,
not talk back,
not pout.
Mother thinks of everything.
She even asked Brother Quang
to bless the house
right after midnight,
so I couldn’t beat him to it
by touching my big toe
to the carpet before dawn.
Mother has set up
an altar
on the highest bookshelf.
The same, forever-young
portrait of Father.
I have to look away.
We each hold an incense stick
and wait for the gong.
I pray for
Father to find warmth in his new home,
Mother to keep smiling more,
Brother Quang to enjoy his studies,
Vu Lee to drive me from and
to
school,
Brother Khôi to hatch an American chick.
I open my eyes.
The others are still praying.
What could they be asking for?
I think and think
then close my eyes again.
This year I hope
I truly learn
to fly-kick,
not to kick anyone
so much as
to fly.
January 31
T
t
Dear Reader:
Much of what happened to Hà, the main character in
Inside Out & Back Again
, also happened to me.
At age ten, I, too, witnessed the end of the Vietnam War and fled to Alabama with my family. I, too, had a father who was missing in action. I also had to learn English and even had my arm hair pulled the first day of school. The fourth graders wanted to make sure I was real, not an image they had seen on TV. So many details in this story were inspired by my own memories.
Aside from remembering facts, I worked hard to capture Hà’s emotional life. What was it like to live where bombs exploded every night yet where sweet snacks popped up at every corner? What was it like to sit on a ship heading toward hope? What was it like to go from knowing you’re smart to feeling dumb all the time?
The emotional aspect is important because of something I noticed in my nieces and nephews. They may know in general where their parents came from, but they can’t really imagine the noises and smells of Vietnam, the daily challenges of starting over in a strange land. I extend this idea to all: How much do we know about those around us?
I hope you enjoy reading about Hà as much as I have enjoyed remembering the pivotal year in my life. I also hope after you finish this book that you sit close to someone you love and implore that person to tell and tell and tell their story.
Thanhha Lai
Much thanks to Angie Wojak, Joe Hosking, Sarah Sevier, Tara Weikum, Rosemary Stimola, and of course my family (M
, Ch
Mai, Anh Anh, Anh Tu
n, Anh Nam, Anh Z
ng, Anh Ti
n, Anh S
n, Ch
H
ng), with whom I shared April 30, 1975, and weeks on a ship, events that decades later led me to Henri and An.