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Sawadika American Girl

Sawadika American Girl is a tender, immersive coming-of-age novel about Piper Lewis, an American teenager growing up in Bangkok during the Vietnam War. Daria Sommers frames Piper’s story through the lens of a Third Culture Kid, then drops us into a city where embassy life, military R&R, Thai domestic rhythms, teenage longing, and the war’s long shadow all exist side by side. The book’s world feels lived in, from samlors and monsoon air to piano lessons in a Thai prince’s compound.

At the heart of the novel is Piper’s search for a place to put her grief, talent, anger, and desire. Music gives her that place. Her lessons with Prince Suriwongse are some of the book’s strongest scenes because they turn piano technique into emotional language. When he tells her, “You think too much Piper. Won’t work that way,” it works as more than advice about Beethoven. It’s also a way of reading Piper herself, a girl trying to control feelings that keep slipping past her.

The novel also becomes a brief, intense love story when Piper meets Jack Gallagher, a nineteen-year-old soldier on R&R from Vietnam. Their connection works because Sommers doesn’t treat it like a fantasy escape. Jack brings the war with him, Piper brings her loneliness and her complicated American life in Thailand, and together they create a small pocket of recognition. One of the book’s loveliest ideas is that belonging can appear suddenly, even in a place where no one fully belongs.

Sommers is especially good at showing how history filters into ordinary rooms: a stepmother’s pregnancy announcement in traffic, a teenage party, a protest outside the embassy, a piano lesson, a hotel lobby full of soldiers. The war isn’t just background scenery. It shapes where people live, what they believe, who they can love, and what they’re able to admit. The Prince’s explanation of khwam sao sok, “a sorrow many people have together,” becomes the book’s emotional key.

Sawadika American Girl has become a story about memory finding a home. Piper’s return to Jack’s name at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial gives the novel a quiet, earned release, because it finally gets witnessed. The book is historical fiction, a love story, a Bangkok novel, and a portrait of a young artist learning how to feel without looking away. It’s intimate, sensory, and generous with its characters, even when they’re lost.

Pages: 304 | ISBN: 3988322121

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