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Putsata Reang (born ca. 1974) is a Cambodian-American journalist and author.
Reang was born in Cambodia and raised in Corvallis, Oregon. [1] [2] [3] In 1975, when she was a baby, her family left war-torn Cambodia and escaped to a naval base in the Philippines. [1] [4]
Reang's writing has appeared in appeared in the New York Times, Politico, [5] the Guardian, and elsewhere.
Reang has won fellowships from the Alicia Patterson Foundation [6] [3] and Jack Straw Cultural Center. [6]
Reang's memoir Ma and Me, about her family's escape to the United States and her difficult relationship with her mother, came out in 2022. [7] It won the 2023 Pacific Northwest Book Award, [8] and was also a finalist for the 2023 Lesbian Memoir/Biography Lambda Literary Award. [8]
Reang teaches memoir writing at the University of Washington School of Professional & Continuing Education. [2]
Reang is married to a woman. [9] [10] As she wrote in a 2016 "Modern Love" column for the New York Times, "I’m gay, or a version of it. I came out to my mother in my 20s as gay because there is no word in our Khmer language for bisexual." [11]
This article may rely excessively on sources
too closely associated with the subject, potentially preventing the article from being
verifiable and
neutral. (May 2023) |
![]() | The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's
notability guideline for biographies. (May 2023) |
Putsata Reang (born ca. 1974) is a Cambodian-American journalist and author.
Reang was born in Cambodia and raised in Corvallis, Oregon. [1] [2] [3] In 1975, when she was a baby, her family left war-torn Cambodia and escaped to a naval base in the Philippines. [1] [4]
Reang's writing has appeared in appeared in the New York Times, Politico, [5] the Guardian, and elsewhere.
Reang has won fellowships from the Alicia Patterson Foundation [6] [3] and Jack Straw Cultural Center. [6]
Reang's memoir Ma and Me, about her family's escape to the United States and her difficult relationship with her mother, came out in 2022. [7] It won the 2023 Pacific Northwest Book Award, [8] and was also a finalist for the 2023 Lesbian Memoir/Biography Lambda Literary Award. [8]
Reang teaches memoir writing at the University of Washington School of Professional & Continuing Education. [2]
Reang is married to a woman. [9] [10] As she wrote in a 2016 "Modern Love" column for the New York Times, "I’m gay, or a version of it. I came out to my mother in my 20s as gay because there is no word in our Khmer language for bisexual." [11]