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I Am Oum Ry

A Champion Kickboxer's Story of Surviving the Cambodian Genocide and Discovering Peace

Zochada Tat author Addi Somekh author Michael G Vann editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:DoppelHouse Press

Published:9th Feb '23

Should be back in stock very soon

This hardback is available in another edition too:

I Am Oum Ry cover

Media Campaign

  • International Print and Broadcast Campaign: targeting NPR (national and California affiliates), BBC, 60 Minutes, New York Times, Washington Post, Minneapolis Star, LA Times, San Francisco Examiner, San Francisco Independent, Chicago Tribune, Boston Globe, The Nation, Slate, etc.

  • Specific pitches to Asian-American magazines, podcasts, writers and editors 

  • Social Media Campaign

  • DRCs available through Edelweiss

Dedicated publicist Justin Hargett

Author tour: Long Beach, Los Angeles, Bay Area

Academic speaking both virtual and in public with the authors and Dr. Michael G. Vann, historian at Cal State University, Sacramento and author of the graphic history The Great Hanoi Rat Hunt: Empire, Disease, and Modernity in French Colonial Vietnam (Oxford University Press, 2018)

Outreach to kickboxing/MMA clubs and associations who have invited Oum Ry to give demonstrations of his unique moves and techniques

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    From champion to refugee to martial-arts teacher, a kickboxing innovator tells of his career, remarkable survival of the Cambodian genocide, and journey toward self-understanding.

    “The story of the legendary martial arts fighter and kickboxer Oum Ry is by turns pulse-pounding, disturbing, and powerful. His is an astonishing life told beautifully by his daughter Zochada Tat and Addi Somekh. The book will grip you from its first pages and not let you go."

    —Jeff Chang, author of Water Mirror Echo: Bruce Lee and the Making of Asian America  and Can’t Stop Won’t Stop: A History of the Hip-Hop Generation

    Oum Ry (b.1944) is a former international champion kickboxer who first brought the Cambodian martial art Pradal Serey to the United States. When his family of silver engravers couldn't afford his food or schooling, he lived with monks until seeking out Pradal Serey masters, soon becoming national champion at 23 years old and one of the most famous fighters in the region. For 15 years, he toured Southeast Asia, and without ever suffering a knock-out, won more than 250 fights. After a young man’s dream-life of stardom, parties, and girls, his new wife gave birth to a child in 1975, two months before the Khmer Rouge entered Phnom Penh and threw the country into the chaos of civil war, where starvation, disease, and mass executions were common.

    Oum Ry survived the genocide though much of his family perished. He was saved many times from death in Cambodia due to fame, talent, and his resilience, but suffered a life-threatening attack during Southern California’s epic gang violence of the 1990s. Earlier, as a refugee with his young family in Chicago, Oum Ry learned English while working cleaning hotels. But within a few years, he had an investor in Long Beach, California and opened one of the first kickboxing gyms in the United States.

    This is Oum Ry's life story, which is propelled by his highly anticipated return to Cambodia in February 2022 to reunite with family and to pass on Pradal Serey traditions to the next generation.

“This memoir strikes hard on multiple levels. It is a reflection of contemporary America and the transnational, transcultural, immigrant experience that many Americans live, whether themselves or vicariously. Oum Ry, like many other fortunate refugees makes his way to the United States where he finds both happiness and deep disappointment. The life of a migrant is bittersweet, filled with hope and longing. Oum Ry’s life has been a rollercoaster in and out of the fighter’s ring, dramatic in positive and negative ways. His is a life worth the reading.”
—Dr. JoAnn LoSavio, Washington State University, Vancouver


ISBN: 9781954600072

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

176 pages