Last Airlift excerpt and ad in The Winnipeg Review
February 4th, 2012
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Posted in Last Airlift
February 4th, 2012
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Posted in Last Airlift
February 2nd, 2012
“Based on personal interviews and enhanced with archive photos, Tuyet’s story of the Saigon orphanage and her flight to Canada is an emotional and suspenseful journey….” Click here to read full review.
Posted in Last Airlift
February 2nd, 2012
“Skrypuch (Daughter of War, 2008) tells the story of the last Canadian airlift through the memories of one child, Son Thi Anh Tuyet. Nearly 8 years old, the sad-eyed girl on the cover had lived nearly all her life in a Catholic orphanage. With no warning, she and a number of the institution babies were […]
Posted in Last Airlift
December 12th, 2011
Last Airlift: A Vietnamese Orphan’s Rescue from War By Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch WHEN the Americans pull out of Saigon in April 1975, many babies are rescued from the orphanage where eight-year-old Tuyet has lived for years. The orphanage is to be abandoned and the children left alone. But Tuyet had polio and walks with a […]
Posted in Last Airlift
December 1st, 2011
Read the Q&A here.
Posted in Last Airlift
December 1st, 2011
The Brant News by Colleen Toms November 24, 2011 Flipping through the pages of Brantford author Marsha Skrypuch’s newest book, The Last Airlift, Tuyet Yurczyszyn points to a black and white photograph. The picture shows numerous children, including babies strapped into cardboard boxes, sitting in the belly of a Hercules aircraft. An arrow with the […]
Posted in Last Airlift
November 11th, 2011
“Young readers will find themselves riding an emotional roller coaster with her as she is taken away by strangers who speak a language unintelligible to her and put aboard a van, and then an airplane filled with screaming babies.” Reviewed by Jocelyn Reekie, for CM Click here to read article.
Posted in Last Airlift
October 28th, 2011
Read the article by Michelle Ruby.
Posted in Last Airlift
October 21st, 2011
“In Last Airlift, Marsha Skrypuch gives a voice to the experience of Vietnamese orphan Son Thi Anh Tuyet. Tuyet was one of 57 babies and children awaiting adoption in an orphanage in the closing days of the Vietnam War. At eight, Tuyet is older than the other orphans; she’s a girl; and she limps due […]
Posted in Last Airlift