Lensey Namioka - Wikipedia
Lensey Namioka (née Chao) (simplified Chinese: 赵来思; traditional Chinese: 趙來思; pinyin: Zhào Láisī or simplified Chinese: 赵莱痕思媚; traditional Chinese: 趙萊痕思媚; pinyin: Zhào Lénsèi; [1][2] born June 14, ) is a Chinese-born American writer of books for young adults and children. Project MUSE - An Interview with Lensey Namioka Lensey Namioka (née Chao) (simplified Chinese: 赵来思; traditional Chinese: 趙來思; pinyin: Zhào Láisī or simplified Chinese: 赵莱痕思媚; traditional Chinese: 趙萊痕思媚; pinyin: Zhào Lénsèi; [1][2] born J) is a Chinese-born American writer of books for young adults and children.Namioka, Lensey 趙來思 · History through Memories and Stories ... Lensey (Chao) Namioka, was born J in Peking, China. She studied at Radcliffe College from 1947-1949 and graduated from the University of California at Berkeley in 1951 and received her master's degree in 1952.WINSOME | Lensey Namioka - Northwest Asian Weekly Namioka is perhaps best known for her series of exciting, adventure-mystery books about two sixteenth-century Japanese samurai warriors and for her humorous, juvenile novels about a family of Chinese immigrants living in Seattle.
Lensey Namioka (1929-) Biography - Awards, Honors ... - JRank
Born , in Peking, China; immigrated to United States, ; Education: Attended Radcliffe College, ; University of California, Berkeley, B.A., , M.A., Hobbies and other interests: Music ("prefer to make it myself badly than to hear it performed superbly"). Agent— Ruth Cohen, Box , La Jola, CA Lensey Namioka - Oxford Reference
Namioka is perhaps best known for her series of exciting, adventure-mystery books about two sixteenth-century Japanese samurai warriors and for her humorous, juvenile novels about a family of Chinese immigrants living in Seattle. Ties That Bind, Ties That Break by Lensey Namioka - Goodreads
Namioka is best known for her series of exciting, adventure-mystery books about two sixteenth-century Japanese samurai warriors and for her humorous, juvenile novels about young Chinese immigrants living in Seattle: Yang the Youngest and His Terrible Ear and Yang the Third and Her Impossible Family. Summary: When Leela is unexpectedly widowed at age twelve, her carefree life ends. NAMIOKA, Lensey 1929-Personal. Born J, in Peking, China; immigrated to United States, 1938; daughter of Yuen Ren (a linguist) and Buwei (a physician and writer; maiden name, Yang) Chao; married Isaac Namioka (a mathematician), September 9, 1957; children: Aki, Michi.
Amid old secrets revealed and rifts healed, a thirteen-year-old Vietnamese orphan raised in rural France by her aging "Grand-Pierre" learns about life, death. Born 1929, in Peking, China; immigrated to United States, 1938; Education: Attended Radcliffe College, 1947-49; University of California, Berkeley, B.A., 1951, M.A., 1952. Hobbies and other interests: Music ("prefer to make it myself badly than to hear it performed superbly"). Agent— Ruth Cohen, Box 2244, La Jola, CA 92038-2244.
ABSTRACT. Namioka, Lensey was born in 1929 in Beijing, China. She and her family moved to the U.S. in 1937 as her father, Chao, Yuen-Ren (趙元任), who was a famous linguist was hired by Yale and then Harvard.
Lensey Namioka (1929-) - Sidelights - Review, World, Journal ...
Namioka, Lensey was born in in Beijing, China. She and her family moved to the U.S. in as her father, Chao, Yuen-Ren (趙元任), who was a famous linguist was hired by Yale and then Harvard.
Lensey Namioka Papers - University of Minnesota Twin Cities
Namioka was born in Beijing, the daughter of linguist Yuenren Chao and physician Buwei Yang Chao. The family moved often in China. In , the Chaos were living in Nanjing, and fled westward in the face of the Japanese Invasion.
Lensey Namioka facts for kids - Kids encyclopedia
“The Valley of the Broken Cherry Trees” by Namioka was published in “Half and Half” by Lensey Namioka was published in By James Tabafunda Northwest Asian Weekly. She excelled in mathematics when she attended elementary school in Cambridge, Mass. Her classmates thought she was weird for her unique academic ability.