Category Archives: Chinese American
My Boyfriend Is a Monster (#1): I Love Him to Pieces by Evonne Tsang, illustrated by Janina Görrissen
Oooh, such campy, goofy, gory fun, complete with a buff, albeit geeky APA male hero! But don’t judge those dweeby glasses just yet …
Welcome to St. Petersburg High School with the usual social cliques. “Jack Chen, you’re the father of my baby!” shouts Dicey Bell, the school’s baseball star, as she bursts into the bio lab. Turn to page 4 to see the prospective parents’ faces and you’ll see exactly what I mean about the charming goof-factor!
Jack and Dicey are the proud protectors of an egg, part of their health education project. Once they get over their first nerd vs. jock spat, they try not to traumatize their progeny any further. In between their custody meetings, Dicey’s busy with her family and team practices, and Jack’s immersed in his “Cultivation of Mutated Insect Pathogenic Fungus” research assistant-ship and hacking with his Dungeons buddies.
Still, that little egg is working hard to bring the unlikely couple together … and Mommy and Daddy finally get out on a first date. But holy moly (!) – it turns out to be a doozy, complete with secret agents, armed militia, high-speed car chases … and uhm … zombie attacks. Surely a memorable beginning of a lasting relationship, right? You gotta read it to believe it!
Readers: Middle Grade, Young Adult
Published: 2011 Continue reading
Nanjing Requiem by Ha Jin
*STARRED REVIEW
In an introductory galley letter, National Book Award winner Ha Jin (Waiting, 1999) announces his intent to reclaim American missionary Minnie Vautrin’s heroism during the 1937 Nanjing massacre: “She suffered and ruined herself helping others, but she became a legend. At least her story has moved me to write a novel about her. If I succeed, my book might put her soul at peace.”
While many were fleeing the city as it came under Japanese attack, Vautrin opened Jinling Women’s College to 10,000 mostly women and children and repeatedly risked her life to save refugees from the atrocities the Japanese military inflicted on Chinese civilians during the Sino-Japanese War. Vautrin’s experiences are filtered through the perspective of her fictional Chinese assistant, who records both Vautrin’s courage and her agonizing demise over the victims she couldn’t save.
Verdict: Requiem is necessary testimony, but as with Iris Chang’s groundbreaking The Rape of Nanking, readers should be aware of the book’s relentless, graphic horror. Jin’s loyal readers will notice a bluntness – jarringly effective here – different from his previous works, as if Jin, too, must guard himself against the horror, the horror.
Review: “Fiction,” Library Journal, August 15, 2011
Readers: Adult
Published: 2011 Continue reading
Filed under ..Adult Readers, .Fiction, Chinese, Chinese American
World and Town by Gish Jen
Hattie Kong’s email inbox is full of desperate pleas from various relatives to please send back her parents’ bones to the family plot in Qufu, China. Because her American missionary mother and her Confucius-descended Chinese father found their final rest in Iowa, the remaining Kong family members are convinced that all manner of unfortunate events – from anorexia to useless boyfriends to even a four-wheel-drive vehicle getting stuck – are a direct result of her parents’ afterlife estrangement from their Kong ancestors, never mind that Hattie’s late mother is actually reposed in her hometown. “‘Hogwash,’” continues to be Hattie’s reply.
At 68, Hattie is mostly alone. Born and raised in China, she landed in the U.S. as a teenager and stayed. She recently lost her husband and best friend, one after the other; her one son lives in Hong Kong, while she lives with her dogs in upstate New York. She’s retired from her biology teaching job, she has a few friends whom she meets to walk and eat. She paints although not necessarily well.
When a Cambodian family arrives with a trailer – thanks to a local church group – just beyond her backyard, Hattie takes cookies and delivers their kitchen drawer (which only Hattie seemed to notice when it fell out during the move). Hattie’s rescue mission is just beginning. The traumatized parents and the older son are survivors of Cambodia’s Killing Fields; their American-born daughter Sophy has a troubled past all her own.
As Hattie adjusts her daily routines to accommodate her new neighbors, Hattie’s heart relives old challenges when her first love, Carter, appears in town. Suddenly her controlled, well-regulated life is anything but … and she must fight old friends, electronic intrusions, God Squad, and even her own ‘Hattie-is-batty’-doubts to somehow regain her crumbling balance.
In spite of moments of clever buoyancy, Gish Jen‘s fourth novel (six years after The Love Wife) seems much … well … heavier than her others. Hattie’s self-absorption, too often mixed with self-pity, becomes weighty baggage over the almost-400 pages. As I was plodding through the final chapters, my mother proudly, even gleefully announced (on the Fourth of July, of all days), that she had finally finished Jen’s debut, Typical American, with delighted enjoyment. Shockingly, that book is already two decades old … and I must admit, I found myself longing for those whimsical, exasperated, hysterical days of Jen’s ‘typical’ youth …
Readers: Adult
Published: 2010 Continue reading
Filed under ..Adult Readers, .Audio, .Fiction, Cambodian, Cambodian American, Chinese, Chinese American, Hapa
The Clay Marble by Minfong Ho
Twelve-year-old Dara, her older brother, and their mother are the only ones left of their once-large family. Although the Vietnam War officially ended in 1975, neighboring Cambodia – decimated by Pol Pot and his Khmer Rouge regime – is still plagued with uncontrolled violence. Dara’s diminished family flees their village to a refugee camp on the Thai-Cambodian border, where they find a near-instant connection with another splintered family.
Dara is especially drawn to Jantu, one year older, whose remarkable talent for creating dolls, toys, whole imaginative worlds out of almost nothing – even muddy clay! – binds the two girls tightly together. When both families are forced to flee yet again, Dara, Jantu, and her injured little brother become separated in the chaos. Fueled by the magic Dara believes Jantu has blown into a special clay marble, Dara tenaciously struggles to reunite both parts of her new family.
Minfong Ho‘s preface reveals her own personal journey guided by a magical clay marble, when she temporarily left college to volunteer with an international relief agency, setting up feeding programs for children in Thai-Cambodian border refugee camps. “I remember my first day at the Border,” she writes. “There are no words to describe the intensity of suffering I saw there. … I wanted to shut my eyes, turn around, and go back home.” But she didn’t.
What kept Ho from leaving was “a ragged little girl,” who offered her “a small round ball of mud” … complete with “a beautiful wide smile.” The laughter of the children that gathered around made Ho see that these refugees were “not the victims of war but its victors.” Although Ho doesn’t know what happened to the little girl – “life could not have been easy for her” – she can still “hope with all [her] heart that the little girl who gave [her] that first clay marble is safe and happy, home in Cambodia.”
Perhaps the spirit of that smiling little girl lives in on Dara’s story, a lingering magic that gives her the strength and determination to continue to survive … and decades later, to thrive.
Readers: Middle Grade
Published: 1991 Continue reading
Filed under ..Middle Grade Readers, .Fiction, Cambodian, Chinese American
Bitter Melon by Cara Chow
You thought Amy Chua was the ultimate Tiger Mother??!! Ha! Chua looks like a mewling cub next to Gracie Ching, the ranting, manipulative, so-called traditional Chinese mother whose idea of tough love includes beating your daughter … wait for it … in someone else’s house, with other people watching, using the trophy said daughter recently won in an academic contest!
In spite of such shattering moments, Cara Chow‘s debut novel is a coming-of-age immigrant story so familiar, it borders on cliché. Frances is a high school senior in 1989 San Francisco, an obedient ‘good girl’ with top grades. Her controlling mother expects her to get into UC Berkeley, become a doctor, and take care of her as payback for all the years she has suffered and sacrificed for her daughter. No surprise that Frances develops her first-ever crush on a smart rich white boy, although dating is something her mother would never allow. But yes, of course, Frances eventually wakes up from her blindly obedient reverie – in this case, thanks to a feisty, nurturing teacher – and discovers her latent sense of self and goes out to conquer the world.
Most of us have read variations of the teenage APA self-discovery novel. But Mommy Dearest Gracie Ching drags the control-freak Asian mother stereotype to such spectacular new lows that Chow’s own promising writing gets eclipsed. You can’t appreciate the simple irony of Gracie’s name (she’s anything but graceful), or Derek’s surprisingly empathetic fish-out-of-water stories when he takes Frances out to a fancy restaurant, or even the gall of the red-haired girl with her distraction tactics during speech competitions.
Instead, Chow’s spotlight on Gracie Ching’s abuse overwhelms all: she slaps and hits without remorse, she lies, she screams and throws things, she criticizes and insults, she does the woe-is-me-routine complete with regular bodily emissions (do we really need to know?). She is relentless, apparently in the name of maternal love. As her sheltered, minor-aged daughter, Frances has little choice but to endure the abuse … but her escape can’t come soon enough, even more so for the reader.
Bitter Melon is a painfully difficult read, to say the least … but not in the way, say Girl in Translation by Jean Kwok – another mother/daughter immigrant story – was a wrenching read. The latter had moments of surprising light to counter the challenges, and the balance ultimately resulted in an engaging, fresh twist to a familiar story. Bitter is merely exhausting to the point of desensitization. With so many better alternatives – I found myself missing the original Tiger Mother! – my final reaction to reaching the bitter end was little more than ‘why did I bother’?
Readers: Middle Grade, Young Adult
Published: 2011 Continue reading
The Great Wall of Lucy Wu by Wendy Wan-Long Shang
Talk about timing … as soon as I finished Lisa Yee’s Warp Speed, I arbitrarily began Wendy Wan-Long Shang‘s Great Wall. The two titles together could be companion texts for sure: both highlight the prevalence of bullying in middle school. Warp Speed‘s Marley Sandelski prevails over his physical attackers; Great Wall‘s Lucy combats emotional treachery.
At 11-almost-12, Lucy Wu is the youngest in her family of three kids. Her annoyingly perfect older sister, with whom she has always shared a room, is off to college, which means Lucy (finally!) gets a room of her own. She’s about to begin her last year of elementary school – and 6th graders rule! She and her best friend Madison already have their bright futures meticulously planned, including matching star basketball careers and their soon-to-be-renowned fame as interior designers.
Except no one told Lucy about Yi Po, the mysterious great-aunt who’s coming for an extended visit and staying in Lucy’s newly vacated room. Just before Lucy’s beloved grandmother died three years ago, she revealed to Lucy’s mother that she had a long-lost sister she hadn’t seen in decades. Her grandmother is gone, but Yi Po is definitely here …
At school, Lucy’s got another unwanted challenge to deal with … queen-bee Sloane decides she should be the 6th grade basketball team captain. Unlike Sloane, Lucy can really play … and play well, even if she’s stuck going to Chinese school on Saturdays when she would much rather be practicing with the team. Sloane decides that being short and Chinese means Lucy is not leader material, and she and her posse will do almost anything to bully Lucy into submission. But buoyed by support from old friends and a few surprisingly new, Lucy figures out how to stay in the game.
Shang’s debut novel is a well-blended cornucopia of the multicultural tween’s challenges. From cultural differences to a multi-generational divide to the complicated social order of today’s middle schoolers, Shang weaves serious issues and concerns into an easy-breezy style that invites young readers to laugh, cringe, worry, cheer, and overcome together.
Readers: Middle Grade
Published: 2011 Continue reading
Filed under ..Middle Grade Readers, .Fiction, Chinese American
Warp Speed by Lisa Yee
Here’s proof that your questions really make a difference, at least to the imaginative Lisa Yee: “On one of her many school visits, a reader asked what happened to Marley from Stanford Wong, which inspired her to tell his story here,” Yee’s “About the Author” end-page reveals. And oh so thrillingly, not only does Stanford re-appear here, but so do Emily Ebers and Millicent Min!
But back to Marley … “I share my name with a dog, a dead guy, and a ghost,” he explains. “Is it any wonder my life sucks?” Marley definitely has it tough: He’s the bottom of the social rung in middle school, virtually invisible, except when he gets bullied. The local rich boy Digger Ronster terrorizes Marley into regularly doing his homework. Even worse, the Gorn (named “after the evil slow-moving beasts” from a Star Trek episode) shove, hit, punch, spit on Marley every day. His only way out is to run … which is something he finds he can do at warp speed.
In spite of the abuse, Marley’s pretty resilient. He and his best friend Ramen (named for the noodles he eats daily – flavors vary) keep their Star Trek vs. Star Wars rivalry well-fueled. New friend Max joins the dynamic duo, throwing Batman into the mix. And Marley is especially enjoying getting to know his new Home Sciences partner, the sweet, cheerful Emily Ebers!
In spite of the supportive adults around him – especially his nurturing parents who run the town’s historically-registered Rialto movie theater – Marley suffers in virtual silence … until he finally finds his own voice.
So as a parent reading this book, as swift-moving and entertaining as it is, my first reaction is head-in-the-sand-denial: are kids really so horrible to each other? Can parents truly be so blind? [Ironically, Marley's mother is actually blind; while she can't see his bruises, her mother's heart certainly feels them.] Well-meaning moms and dads will make up “Be a buddy, not a bully” bracelets for every child, yet have no regard for battered Marley who happens to be setting up the AV equipment for their latest meeting to discuss “‘Understanding Your Middle Schooler: The Complicated and Confusing Lives of Our Precious Tweens and Teens.”"
Decades ago, my younger brother and I were bullied – physical, emotional, racially charged – to the point our parents pulled us out of that school. Forty years later, how heartbreaking that not enough has changed. That said, realizing titles like this are readily available as resources for both the bullied and the bully (a child often learns bullying behavior tragically from direct experience) is definite progress; books like this send a strong message that today’s kids are not alone, that their stories are being told, that finally, firmly, their bullying days will be a distant memory.
Read this book with your children. Read other books like it. Share the stories. Imagine and create solutions together. Then teach your children to be advocates for others. Peace … it really is the ultimate frontier.
Readers: Middle Grade, Young Adult
Published: 2011 Continue reading
Level Up by Gene Luen Yang, art by Thien Pham
National Book Award-finalist Gene Luen Yang‘s latest title is a collaboration with a fellow high school teacher Thien Pham: their obviously convivial partnership is evident even before their comic begins. “Dedicated to our brothers Jon and Thinh, both of whom work in the medical field, for being the good Asian sons,” their shared bubble announces at the top of the copyright page. How can we not chuckle along with that signature Asian self-awareness?
By implication, ‘bad Asian sons’ Yang and Pham spin a touching tale of Dennis Ouyang, a young man who must ultimately “level up” to gain control of his own life. At age 6, Dennis first glimpses video games. Yet in spite of his instant fascination, he watches but never plays out of respect for his struggling immigrant father who has had to “eat much bitterness” to provide for his family. Not until his father dies two weeks before Dennis’ high school graduation does he actually pick up a game controller … and then he can’t seem to stop. What he might lack in self-control, Dennis makes up for in pure, limitless gaming talent.
By junior year of college, Dennis’ academic probation becomes expulsion. But divine intervention (in the form of four helpful halo-ed cuties) materializes just in time to save his disastrous academic career: he’s not only reinstated, but he’s soon on his way (of course!) to med school.
Yet being the good son doesn’t necessarily make Dennis happy. Will he remain the filial son whom his bitter-eating father so longed for? Or will he frivolously become the ultimate gamer?
Level by level, Yang and Pham delve deeper into Dennis’ story – his troubling relationship with his late father, his interactions with his disappointed mother, his new friends with even more opinions on how he should live his life …
In addition to all the fun and games (literally!), Dennis’s story is also a potent examination of the intricacies of the uniquely Asian American parent/child relationship. Move over, Tiger Mother … prepare to meet true Destiny!
Readers: Middle Grade, Young Adult
Published: 2011 Continue reading
Seven Fathers retold by Ashley Ramsden, illustrated by Ed Young
International storyteller Ashley Ramsden retells a Norwegian tale about the rich rewards of patient tenacity. “One winter’s evening, a lone traveler trudged down a winding forest road looking for a place to spend the night …,” the story begins. Cold and tired, the traveler is on the verge of collapse when he sees “a house blazing with lights.”
Thinking he has finally found refuge, he asks the old man outside if he might rest there for the night. But rest is not yet his, as the old man tells the traveler he must ask his father … but that father is not the father of the house, and the traveler must keep seeking and asking until he is finally granted his answer … and so much more.
The highlight here, as with anything with mega-award-winning Ed Young‘s name on the cover, is the evocative art. Using his signature collage method of found textures and designs, combined with pastel colors, charcoal, and ink, Young captures the traveler’s exhausted stoop, his moment of rest against a tree as he thankfully looks on at the lit house ahead, the torn bright paper of the warming fire, the looming height of the “great oak table,” his clever choice of an aerial view of a modern neighborhood subdivision to suggest the “a magnificent drinking horn.”
The final page – “And what happend when he woke the next morning? Well, that is another story – is a lovely teasing promise of more to come …
Readers: Children
Published: 2011 Continue reading
Filed under ..Children/Picture Books, .Fiction, British, Chinese American, European
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