![]() Holiday in Cambodia shows the ugly side of post-colonial tourism, as well as moments of great pathos and dignity, in a compelling and empathetic voice.’-Alice Pung ‘Each of these stories is like catching a snippet of a conversation or looking into a lit window in a dark night, and loitering longer than you should to hear and see what characters inadvertently reveal about themselves. ![]() These are bold and haunting stories by a remarkable new talent. Three backpackers board a train, ignoring the danger signs - and find themselves in the hands of the Khmer Rouge.Įlderly sisters are visited by their vampire niece from Australia and set out to cure her.Ī singer creates a sensation in swinging 1969, on the eve of an American bombing campaign. In Holiday in Cambodia Laura Jean McKay explores the electric zone where local and foreign lives meet. A frontier land where anything is possible - at least for the tourists. ![]() Beyond the killing fields and the temples of Angkor is Cambodia: a country with a genocidal past and a wide, open smile. ![]()
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