When Moua was diagnosed with endstage
renal disease as a junior at
St. Olaf College, she searched for inspiration and comfort in writing by her fellow Hmong-Americans. This experience inspired Moua to publish the first edition of
Paj Ntuab Voice and to edit
Bamboo Among the Oaks. Predominantly a creative non-fiction writer, she has been published in
How do I Begin?,
Where One Voice Ends, Another Begins,
Healing by Heart,
Rehabilitation Counseling Bulletin, the
Minneapolis Star Tribune, and
We Are the Freedom People. Her literary awards include the Bush Artists Fellowship, the Minnesota State Arts Board Artist Initiative Grant, the Jerome Travel Grant, and the Loft Literary Center's Mentor Series. She has taught creative writing to youth through the
Jane Addams School for Democracy, COMPAS, and Success Beyond the Classroom. Moua was also a pivotal figure in the creation of the Hmong American Institute for Learning, a non-profit organization based in Minnesota that focused on Hmong oral histories, the literary arts and the continued publication of the
Paj Ntaub Voice Hmoob Literary Journal. Moua currently works for the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development as a Rapid Response Specialist. Her previous jobs include being the program coordinator for the Kellogg Action Lab at Fieldstone Alliance and the public policy coordinator for The Institute for New Americans. Moua has won a Bush Foundation Research Grant and was awarded an Artist Initiative Grant from the Minnesota State Arts Board. In 2017, Moua published The bride price : a Hmong wedding story, an autobiographical account of her cross-cultural wedding traditions and experiences. == Personal life ==