In her memoir, the author, Rose Bui, recounts the experiences of her true real-life narrative of how, she, a poor young villager from a family of farmers, became trapped between the ongoing pillars of guerilla warfare.
"We needed a substantial meal to keep us going in case we needed to flee as soon as the French planes sounded in the distance, ready to bombard. We ran until we reached the holes in the backyard of our home. Each hole could only fit one person and was about a man's head below ground level."
Political, military, diplomatic, economic, and socio-cultural issues all contributed to the French loss of its Indochinese possessions. The French lost power with the fall of Dien Bien Phu in 1954. During a period when Vietnam was at war with France, the French invaded the urban areas, while the Viet Minh party controlled the countryside. On the eve of the Geneva Conference, General Vo Nguyen Giap and his Viet Minh triumphed. Before 1954, times were drastically different.
Ho Chi Minh's Viet Minh forces decisively beat the French at Dien Bien Phu, a French bastion besieged by Vietnamese communists for 57 days in northwest Vietnam. The Viet Minh victory at Dien Bien Phu heralded the end of French colonial influence in Indochina, paving the door for Vietnam to be divided along the 17th parallel at the Geneva conference.
In her heroic and desperate attempts to escape Vietnam, she is caught between sacrificing her and her three children's lives in order to cross the ocean to attain freedom. Despite the odds being stacked against her, she outwits the Viet Cong and finds herself responsible for a vessel full of Vietnamese refugees.
This book offers previously untold stories about the author's life, beginning with her youth and leading up to her courageous escape, and how she and her three out of four children managed to flee Vietnam and seek refuge in the United States.