User:Amiaheroyet/sandboxrobinha

Robin Ha is an illustrator, writer, and graphic novelist.

Early Life
Ha was born in Seoul, South Korea by the name Ha Chuna. She was raised by her single mother, Cassie Chin, in Seoul until at the age of 14, her mother brought her on a summer trip to the United States that became a permanent relocation to Huntsville, Alabama after her mother abruptly announced marriage to a suitor there. While in the United States, she maintained her interest in Korean manhwa comic books an interest imparted by her mother. Ha would graduate from the Rhode Island School of Design, and relocate to Brooklyn, where she began trying her hand in cooking Korean cuisine.

Cook Korean!
Ha was a textile designer when she contributed a single page for a comic anthology illustrating a recipe for a Korean dish. In 2014, she began illustrating recipes for Korean dishes and posting an web comic series titled "Banchan in Two Pages”. After the popularity of the series grew, Ten Speed Press approached Ha about publishing an illustrated cookbook. As she had not gone formal culinary training and was a relatively inexperienced cook, she cooked with her mother for the first time to develop the 70 recipes featured.

In 2016, Ha released "Cook Korean!: A Comic Book with Recipes", which contained both narrative-driven comics as well as illustrations with recipes and explanations of Korean ingredients and practices. It debuted on the New York Times Bestselling List. Ha's choice of integrating Korean characters into the mostly English text, rather than transliterating or translating them, was highlighted as a part of a trend of foreign characters appearing in English cookbooks.

Almost American Girl
In 2013, Ha began working a memoir focusing of her own immigration.

On January 28th of 2020, Ha released Almost American Girl, which she both wrote and illustrated. The graphic novel recalls Ha's experience with immigrating from South Korea to the United States as a teenager, including the difficulties on racist harassment, tension with Asian American relatives, and acclimating to foreign school and lifestyles. One review described its as "an insightful, moving coming-of-age tale," while another noted the work as "also a love letter to comics fans." It would be honored with