Award winning author Khanh Ha is a ten-time Pushcart nominee, finalist for The Ohio State University Fiction Collection Prize, Mary McCarthy Prize, Many Voices Project, Prairie Schooner Book Prize, The University of New Orleans Press Lab Prize, Prize Americana, and The Santa Fe Writers Project. He is the recipient of the Sand Hills Prize for Best Fiction, The Robert Watson Literary Prize in Fiction, The Orison Anthology Award for Fiction, The James Knudsen Prize for Fiction, The C&R Press Fiction Prize, The EastOver Fiction Prize, The Blackwater Press Fiction Prize, The Gival Press Novel Award, and The Red Hen Press Fiction Award. His award-winning novel The Afterlife of a Threadbare Jester will be published by Red Hen Press in 2026.
"Short, jewel-like chapters, evocative and layered. A beautifully written book." - Roundfire Books
"THE EUNUCH'S DAUGHTER is indeed a beautiful book: extraordinary writing, interesting characters and a fascinating depiction of Vietnam's history." - Washington Writers' Publishing House
"It is a remarkable story - ambitious, sweeping, and very beautiful. A gorgeous story as complex as Russian nesting dolls. An incredibly beautiful and compelling read." - Alexis Gargagliano (former Scribner's Editor)
"Khanh Ha's latest work, THE EUNUCH'S DAUGHTER & STORIES may be his best effort to date. He's a writer of rare talent able to plumb the depth of the human heart in the smooth rhythm of a meandering river. Ha steers the reader through the currents of history, heartbreak, and human dignity like a master riverboat captain. The writing is so smooth, so fluid, that the audience, entranced by the passing landscape, will not realize there is someone steering the boat. The visual is so vivid that the mystery and beauty of existence ripple up from the deepest of depths. Ha's work always put me in mind of Faulkner in that it has a mythic quality that only the best writers are able to capture. At the same time, it is - at times brutally - realistic. As in all of Ha's work, there is some thing redemptive at play, something hopeful in tragedy, something dignified in sorrow. In short, these stories are beautiful. I can't recommend THE EUNUCH'S DAUGHTER & STORIES highly enough." - John Gist, author of The Yewberry Way: Book I Prayer, Lizard Dreaming of Birds, and Crowheart