Courtesy of AP/Wide World Photos
Courtesy of AP/Wide World Photos
Courtesy of Bettmann/Corbis
Courtesy of Bettmann/Corbis
From the photo archives of FCVN/FFAC and the personal collection of Mary Nelle Gage, S.L.
Wilbur E. Garrett / National Geographic Image Collection
Courtesy of Holt International Children’s Services
Courtesy of Holt International Children’s Services
Courtesy of Pam Larsen
Courtesy of Steve Lopes
National Archives
National Archives
National Archives
National Archives
Courtesy of Glen Noteboom
Courtesy of Glen Noteboom
Courtesy of Glen Noteboom
Courtesy of Glen Noteboom
J. Baylor Roberts / National Geographic Image Collection
Courtesy of Matt Steiner
Courtesy of Matt Steiner and Mary Psolla
Courtesy of Matt Steiner and Mary Psolla
Courtesy of Matt Steiner and Mary Psolla
Courtesy of Matt Steiner and Mary Psolla
Courtesy of Matt Steiner and Mary Psolla
Courtesy of Matt Steiner and Mary Psolla
Courtesy of Matt Steiner and Mary Psolla
Courtesy of Matt Steiner and Mary Psolla
Courtesy of Matt Steiner and Mary Psolla
Courtesy of Matt Steiner and Mary Psolla
Courtesy of Jay Wiedenkeller
Courtesy of Jay Wiedenkeller
Courtesy of Jay Wiedenkeller
Courtesy of Jay Wiedenkeller
Courtesy of Jay Wiedenkeller
INDEX
The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.
adoption
see also international adoptions
Alison (Alice Spring, now Alison Warren Doerr)
Amerasians
Communist mistreatment of
at Holt Center
Vietnamese discrimination against
Amy
Anh, Miss
and departure from Holt Center
special outings with
Australia
Ba (Long’s grandmother)
Buddhism of
and daughter’s suicide
and Holt Center
life in Saigon of
Long’s adoption and separation from
village life of
betel nuts
Buddhists
Cambodia
Canada
casualties of war
civilian
Catholics
C-5A cargo plane, crash of
Chamness, Bob
Chinese
Communists
Amerasians and
fall of Danang to
South Vietnamese fear of reprisals by
offensive against South Vietnam launched by
refugees from
see also Vietcong
Congress, U.S.
Convoy of Tears
Danang
Communist takeover of
discrimination
against Amerasians in Vietnam
Ford, Gerald
foster parents
French
Friends For All Children (FFAC)
Gage, Mary Nelle
Ho Chi Minh City, Saigon renamed as
holidays
American
Vietnamese
Holocaust
Holt International Children’s Services
adoptions arranged by
airlift organized by, (see also Operation Babylift)
Saigon center of
Indians (American)
international adoptions
of Amerasian children
arranged by Holt International Children’s Services
King Kong (movie)
Korean War
Ky
Lan
Laos
Larsen, Peik
Long, see Steiner, Matthew Ray
Marines, U.S.
Mekong Delta
Mennonites
Navy, U.S.
Newhaven
North Vietnam
final offensive of
map of
refugees from
victory of
Noteboom, Glen
O’Hare International Airport (Chicago)
Operation Babylift
crash of C-5A cargo plane during
Operation Frequent Wind
orphanages
see also Holt International Children’s Services, Saigon center of orphans
adoption of, see adoption; international adoptions
Amerasian
evacuation of, see Operation Babylift
homeless
Pan American Airlines
Peace Corps
Pioneer Contender (ship)
“re-education camps”
refugees
escape from Vietnam of
evacuation of
in United States
rice paddies
Saigon
Americans evacuated from
bicycles and cyclos in
children airlifted to United States from
fall of
food vendors in
Holt Center in
homeless children in
open-air markets in
weather in
zoo in
sampans
school
in America
in Vietnam
South Vietnam
American soldiers in
army of
evacuation of refugees from
fall of
final offensive in
map of
orphans in
after reunification
Steiners in
Vietcong in
see also Saigon
Steiner, Christian
Steiner, Dan
Steiner, Doug
Steiner, Jeff
Steiner, Jim
Steiner, Kate
Steiner, Laura Gamble
Steiner, Mary
Steiner, Matthew Ray (Long)
adoption of
arrival in Chicago of
birth of
childhood in Saigon of
flight to America of
at Holt Center
life in United States of
and mother’s death
newspaper interview with
return to Vietnam of
United States citizenship of
village life of
Tai
Tan Son Nhut Airport (Saigon)
Taylor, Rosemary
Tet
United States
arrival of orphans in
emigration of Amerasians to
evacuation of children to
and fall of Saigon
Vietnamese refugees in
in Vietnam War
Vietcong
Vietnam
French in
map of
re-education camps in
rural villages in
see also North Vietnam; South Vietnam
Vietnam War
aftermath of
Amerasian children born during, see Amerasians
end of
final offensive of
number of casualties in
refugees from, see refugees
United States in
water buffaloes
Williams, John
World War II
By the same author
Orphan Train Rider: One Boy’s True Story
Pioneer Girl: Growing Up on the Prairie
Surviving Hitler: A Boy in the Nazi Death Camps
We Rode the Orphan Train
s
An Imprint of Macmillan
ESCAPE FROM SAIGON.
Copyright © 2004 by Andrea Warren. Map copyright © 2004 by Jeffrey L. Ward. All rights reserved. For information, address Square Fish, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010.
Square Fish and the Square Fish logo are trademarks of Macmillan and are used by Farrar Straus Giroux under license from Macmillan.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Warren, Andrea.
Escape from Saigon : how a Vietnam War orphan became an American boy / Andrea Warren.
p. cm.
Summary: Chronicles the experiences of an orphaned Amerasian boy from his birth and early childhood in Saigon through his departure from Vietnam in the 1975 Operation Babylift and his subsequent life as the adopted son of an American family in Ohio, and his return to Vietnam.
ISBN 978-0-374-40023-1
1. Steiner, Matt—Juvenile literature. 2. Vietnamese Americans—Biography—Juvenile literature 3. Adopted children—United States—Biography—Juvenile literature. 4. Orphans—Vietnam—Biography—Juvenile literature. 5. Vietnamese Conflict, 1961–1975—Children—Juvenile literature. 6. Vietnamese Conflict, 1961–1975—Refugees—Juvenile literature. 7. Ho Chi Minh City (Vietnam)—Biography—Juvenile literature. [1. Steiner, Matt. 2. Vietnamese Americans—Biography. 3. Vietnamese Conflict, 1961–1975—Children. 4. Intercountry adoption. 5. Interracial adoption. 6. Adoption.] I. Title.
E184.V53S74 2004 959.704'3'086*45—dc22 2003060672
Originally published in the United States by Farrar Straus Giroux
First Square Fish Edition: February 2012
Square Fish logo designed by Filomena Tuosto
mackids.com
AR: 6.2 / LEXILE: 930L
eISBN 9781466834484
First eBook edition: November 2012
Escape from Saigon Page 9