Showing posts with label The Cambodian Royal Chronicle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Cambodian Royal Chronicle. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Recipients of a free copy of the Cambodian Royal Chronicle by Chanda Chhay


Re: The Cambodian Royal Chronicle

Dear Readers:

Below are the locations of the 5 recipients who will receive a copy of The Cambodian Royal Chronicle.
  1. Santa Ana, CA
  2. Lacey, WA
  3. Dekalb, IL
  4. North Attleboro, MA
  5. Toul Kork, Phnom Penh
I sent the books out today via USPS. So, with the exception of the one going to Phnom Penh, you should receive this book over the weekend. I am sorry for those whose names did not make the list. I wish I had more books to send out. The responses have been overwhelming. I would like to also take the opportunity to thank everyone for his/her interest in the book. Due to time constraints, I could not respond to your e-mail individually. And I ask for your forgiveness on that.

Regards,
Chanda Chhay

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

The Cambodian Royal Chronicle - by Chanda Chhay

Dear Readers:

Below is an information on a newly release book on Cambodian history. The publisher has sent me a number of complimentary copies. I have 5 copies of this book left. If anyone would like to obtain a copy of this book, please send your name and address to the e-mail below:

Khemara_kakvey@yahoo.com

Notice: Only the first five persons whose names appear on the e-mail will receive a copy of the book as I have only five copies. Names and addresses will be kept confidential.

Chanda Chhay


Click to zoom in

Author and reporter Chanda Chhay is an American of Cambodian descent who spent the first twenty-five years of his life in Cambodia, and lived through "one of the most horrific social upheaval that has ever happened to humankind." The experience has led an indelible mark on Mr. Chhay’s memory—and was the great impetus to write The Cambodian Royal Chronicle.

This invaluable work covers three main topics: the history ol the Cambodian monarchy an analytic essay on the Cambodian people, society, culture and civilization; and a fascinating report by a Chinese envoy on the customs of the people of Cambodia at the turn of the 13th century.

As a Cambodian who had lived through the destruction of Cambodian society under the Khmer Rouge rule in the late 1970s, Mr. Chhay draws from his vast knowledge of his people's colorful, vio¬lent, and culturally rich history to present a substantive book for students of Cambodian history, as well as for the educated reader.

Chanda Chhay was born in Kompong Cham province, Cambodia. He lived through and witnessed the Cambodian political upheavals in the 1970s and 1980s as a teenager. In 1989, after spending four years in a refugee camp in Thailand, he emigrated to the United States and earned a bachelor’s degree in communications, government, and politics from George Mason University in 1995. Soon afterward, he began working as a conference reporter in Washington. D.C. Mr. Chhay currently resides in northern Virginia and visits Cambodia regularly. This is his first published book.