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Miss Burma

Audiobook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

A beautiful and poignant story of one family during the most violent and turbulent years of world history, Miss Burma is a powerful novel of love and war, colonialism and ethnicity, and the ties of blood.

Miss Burma tells the story of modern-day Burma through the eyes of Benny and Khin, husband and wife, and their daughter Louisa. After attending school in Calcutta, Benny settles in Rangoon, then part of the British Empire, and falls in love with Khin, a woman who is part of a long-persecuted ethnic minority group, the Karen. World War II comes to Southeast Asia, and Benny and Khin must go into hiding in the eastern part of the country during the Japanese Occupation, beginning a journey that will lead them to change the country's history.

After the war, the British authorities make a deal with the Burman nationalists, led by Aung San, whose party gains control of the country. When Aung San is assassinated, his successor ignores the pleas for self-government of the Karen people and other ethnic groups, and in doing so sets off what will become the longest-running civil war in recorded history. Benny and Khin's eldest child, Louisa, has a danger-filled, tempestuous childhood and reaches prominence as Burma's first beauty queen soon before the country falls to dictatorship. As Louisa navigates her newfound fame, she is forced to reckon with her family's past, the West's ongoing covert dealings in her country, and her own loyalty to the cause of the Karen people.

Based on the story of the author's mother and grandparents, Miss Burma is a captivating portrait of how modern Burma came to be and of the ordinary people swept up in the struggle for self-determination and freedom.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 13, 2017
      It’s 1941 when Khin, a young, pregnant Karen (one of many ethnic groups in Burma), looks up at the sky to see “at least fifty planes flying in formation toward her—toward them all... like nothing she had ever seen, and yet precisely like what she had been preparing to witness all her life.” The Japanese have invaded, the British hold is slipping fast, and the fragmented worlds from which Khin and her Jewish husband, Benny, have come will continue to fracture for decades. This is the moment at which the war stops being a source of indecision about where to go and becomes instead what forces Khin, Benny, and their daughter Louisa onto an “airless train” without a clear destination. The book itself begins much earlier, as Benny, the son of a rabbi in Rangoon’s Jewish quarter, was growing up in the 1920s before seeing Khin and falling instantly in love with her, despite initially sharing almost no common language. Spanning generations and multiple dictators, Craig’s epic novel provides a rich, complex account of Burma and its place within the larger geopolitical theater. The first half of the book is an undeniable success; the language and the images unfold with grace, horror, and intimacy. The second half, however, becomes weighted down by the history of various corrupt generals and the parties they represent, and it loses the spark and the momentum.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Author Charmaine Craig provides a tender imagined account of her own family in twentieth-century Southeast Asia. An author's narration can be a treat because she can bring her words to life in a way that no one else can. In every scene, Craig is captivating as she recounts her grandmother's quiet strength, her grandfather's desperate drive, and her mother's precociousness. Throughout the story, Craig delivers the theme of being unmoored as the characters experience a loss of place, and of self. Through her imagining of her family's multigenerational story, Craig provides a captivating historical fiction of modern Burma. M.P.P. © AudioFile 2017, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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