Lady Borton is a Quaker author and journalist. During the Vietnam War she volunteered for the American Friends Service Committee and then lived in Vietnam for many years. She was one of the few westerners who was allowed to live there after the end of the Vietnam war due to her works being sympathetic to the communist regime. Her works include After Sorrow, an account of her time in Vietnam and the people there.[1][2]
Bibliography
- The Defiant Muse: Vietnamese Feminist Poems from Antiquity to the Present
- After Sorrow: An American Among the Vietnamese
- Sensing the Enemy: An American Woman Among the Boat People of Vietnam
- Vietnam on the Move (The Gioi Publishers 2006)
- Karen Cadbury, "Our Enemy Is Not People: An Interview with Lady Borton", Friends Journal, Nov. 15, 1984
External links
- https://www.ladyborton.org/
- "Aid workers reflect on Vietnam War", PBS.org, American Experience
- "Lady Borton", diaCritics, Nov. 27, 2011
- "Lady Borton Discusses Her Book After Sorrow", Studs Terkel Radio Archive
- "Vietnam Story: Lady Borton of North Haverill, NH", New England Public Media, Oct. 26, 2017
- ↑ Diana Nelson Jones (22 February 2018), "In Hanoi, Lady Borton has legacy of Vietnam service", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
- ↑ Mark A. Ashwill (7 February 2019), "On the outside looking in: A US American in Vietnam", VnExpress