'Wild Swans meets Educated in this riveting true story spanning four generations
'The dreamer boy travelling on dragon hide ... a tiger running alone in the night ...
'Mimi Kwa ignored the letter for days. When she finally opened it, the news was so shocking her hair turned grey. Why would a father sue his own daughter?
'The collision was over the estate of Mimi's beloved Aunt Theresa, but its seed had been sown long ago. In an attempt to understand how it had come to this, Mimi unspools her rich family history in House of Kwa.
'One of a wealthy silk merchant's 32 children, Mimi's father, Francis, was just a little boy when the Kwa family became caught up in the brutal and devastating Japanese occupation of Hong Kong during World War II. Years later, he was sent to study in Australia by his now independent and successful older sister Theresa. There he met and married Mimi's mother, a nineteen-year-old with an undiagnosed, chronic mental illness. Soon after, 'tiger' Mimi arrived, and her struggle with the past and the dragon began ...
'Riveting, colourful and often darkly humorous, House of Kwa is an epic family drama spanning four generations, and an unforgettable story about how one woman finds the courage to stand up for her freedom and independence, squaring off against the ghosts of the past and finally putting them to rest. Throughout, her inspiration is Francis's late older sister, the jet-setting, free-spirited Aunt Theresa, whose extraordinary life is a beacon of hope in the darkness.'
Source : publisher's blurb
'Australian broadcast journalist Mimi Kwa comes from a lineage going back to imperial Beijing. In her new family memoir, House of Kwa, she tells the remarkable story that brought her father’s family to Southern China, Hong Kong, and Western Australia.' (Introduction)
'Television journalist and newsreader Mimi Kwa peers into the mirror, shocked by what she sees. Overnight, a thick sprig of her raven hair has turned grey. It is the morning after she has received yet another threatening letter from her father, this one outlining his intention to sue for her inheritance: Kwa v Kwa is headed for the Supreme Court of Western Australia.' (Introduction)
'Television journalist and newsreader Mimi Kwa peers into the mirror, shocked by what she sees. Overnight, a thick sprig of her raven hair has turned grey. It is the morning after she has received yet another threatening letter from her father, this one outlining his intention to sue for her inheritance: Kwa v Kwa is headed for the Supreme Court of Western Australia.' (Introduction)
'Australian broadcast journalist Mimi Kwa comes from a lineage going back to imperial Beijing. In her new family memoir, House of Kwa, she tells the remarkable story that brought her father’s family to Southern China, Hong Kong, and Western Australia.' (Introduction)