Author: terryhong

  • My Father Knows the Names of Things by Jane Yolen, illustrated by Stéphane Jorisch

    With over 300 titles to her name, Jane Yolen simply couldn’t be more prolific!

    Here she teams up with the whimsically fantastic illustrator Stéphane Jorisch who captures Yolen’s delight-filled father/daughter adventures as they meet dogs walking their owner, paint a room seven shades of blue, get up close and personal to curious fish, explore a field of flowers, sample colorful candies, and so much more.

    “He points out everything we see / And teaches all the names to me,” the little girl thinks just as she drifts off to slumber land.

    Yolen’s latest is a perfect way to end a special day, reading together all snuggled up with your favorite little (or big … no age or size discrimination here!) child, recounting the day’s adventures. Couldn’t be a cozier moment to decide together which blue – teal, azure, turquoise, cerulean, indigo, cobalt, or ultramarine – might be the most sleep-inducing blue of all …

    By the way, this would make a really adorable Father’s Day gift … I know it’s a couple of months away, but never a bad thing to plan early (coming from a chronic procrastinator, ahem!).

    Readers: Children

    Published: 2010

    Filed under: ..Children/Picture Books, .Fiction, Nonethnic-specific Tagged: Adventure, Family, Kiddie fun, Parent/child relationship

  • Prime Baby by Gene Luen Yang

    Gene Luen Yang, who made publishing history as the author of the first graphic novel ever to be nominated for a National Book Award, returns with an irresistible, hilarious little book that takes sibling rivalry to whole new heights. First serialized in The New York Times Magazine and collected here “with a few changes,” Prime … is, well … prime for some good old-fashioned laughter.

    Thaddeus K. Fong looks back with fondness on his 6th birthday party just two years ago. “What a poor fool I was then, blissful in my own ignorance,” he laments. “Little did I know how different things would be a mere six months later –” Enter baby sister Maddie: “My mother’s womb is a Trojan horse, I tell you.”

    That’s just page one! Admit it … you’re giggling already. How clever is that Trojan horse thing?

    Okay, so Thaddeus’ life is basically ruined and not just because no one seems to be able to resist Maddie’s “fat little baby cheeks.” At 18 months, she’s still not saying much more than a string of ‘ga’s … BUT (!) Maddie speaks in ‘ga’s repeated in prime number sequences only … and she’s anything but “dumb in the head,” a comment that initially lands Thaddeus in the corner, albeit making him a “Martyr for Truth.”

    Truth happens when Maddie starts urping up alien space pods! When the pods release “missionaries of smiles and happy feelings,” Thaddeus’ lifelong goal of becoming a “smokin’ hot president” are temporarily foiled … how can he be the hero if all these aliens want to do is make nice and do good deeds? Who’s he possibly going to save?

    When his parents finally witnesses the truth before their very eyes, Maddie ends up in a “secret underground research facility, accessible only through a fake wall in the broom closet of a Vietnamese nail salon downtown.” Sure Thaddeus has finally been vindicated, but then he starts missing that babbling bundle … even if she really is an alien portal! What we don’t do for our siblings …! You’ll have to read for yourself just how Thaddeus becomes a hero after all …

    Click here to read my 2007 interview with Gene Yang.

    Readers: Middle Grade, Young Adult, Adult

    Published: 2010

    Filed under: ..Adult Readers, ..Middle Grade Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Fiction, .Graphic Novels/Memoir/Manga/Manwha, Chinese American Tagged: Family, Identity, Parent/child relationship, Sibling rivalry, Siblings

  • Raven Summer by David Almond

    David Almond has been repeatedly popping up in my inbox recently. Not him personally (don’t I wish, as he is definitely one of my very favorite writers for young adult titles), but his mega-award-winning name is haunting my emails… I recently saw the latest stage version of his signature title, Skellig, in London. And then saw a mention in a random email that Tod Machover had done an opera based on Skellig – wish I’d seen that! Tod was my brother’s longtime advisor at MIT’s Media Lab (bro was on the never-finished 10-year plan). Apparently, a film version of Skellig is also floating around!

    Last week at the Bologna Children’s Book Fair, Almond won what is arguably the world’s top prize in kiddie literature, the Hans Christian Andersen Author Award for 2010 from the International Board on Books for Young People. And yesterday, I heard he’s coming to NYC as part of the Sixth Annual PEN World Voices Festival of International Literature; Almond will be part of “A Gathering of Voices” on Thursday, at the Instituto Cervantes, April 29 at 7:00 pm, if anyone going to be in town …

    With all those signs to prod me, I picked up his latest (in the U.S. anyway) and couldn’t put it down. Raven Summer is a gorgeous, heartbreaking story of how families can so easily come together … and just as easily be torn completely apart. Liam and Max, are young teenagers on summer break, playing in Liam’s yard in rural northeastern England. Following a raven’s insistent call, the boys are led on a journey through fields and brooks, moors and footpaths, to what’s left of an ancient farmhouse where among the broken stones, they find a baby: “PLESE LOOK AFTER HER RIGHT. THIS IS A CHILDE OF GOD,” reads the scribbled note pinned to the baby’s blanket.

    Indeed, every child should be ‘look[ed] after right.’ But Liam soon discovers otherwise. The baby is taken by the local police, and when no one claims the child, she is placed into foster care. Liam and his parents seek out the lost baby, now named Alison, in her new group foster home. There Liam meets two older foster children: Oliver, who has survived unimaginable horrors in his native Liberia, and Crystal, who lost her entire family to fire. The connection is instant … and Liam, Oliver, and Crystal will face a shocking future together.

    Alternating between terse, stark bursts with languid verses on creativity and imagination, Almond offers another memorable story that confronts difficult, grown-up issues through younger eyes. The true price of war, xenophobia, fractured relationships, abusive parents, desperate children … and yet, somewhere in that very real world, families are formed and somehow still flourish.

    Readers: Middle Grade, Young Adult

    Published: 2008 (United States)

    Filed under: ..Middle Grade Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Fiction, British Tagged: Adoption, Coming-of-age, Family, Friendship, Refugees

  • Barack the Barbarian: Quest for the Treasure of the Stimuli by Larry Hama (writer), Christopher Schons (artist), Rachelle Rosenberg (colorist), Crank! (letterer), Evan Sult (editor/designer)

    Regardless of your politics (although there’s no mistaking where longtime comics creator Larry Hama and the rest of his funny cronies’ loyalties lie), you will definitely find many moments to guffaw over in this four-part comic series too entertaining to put down!

    The New Ice Age has destroyed civilization as we know it. Grandfather Seal Hunter gathers his many (multi-culti hapa quadroopa – and is that Aang to his right? ) grandkiddies in the family igloo complex to tell them stories of the last great hero …!

    “Know, O Prince, that before the glaciers at the world and the rise of the Sons of Inuit, there was an Age undreamed of, when shining republics lay spread across the earth like warm bison blankets under the stars –

    “Britannia, land of crooked teeth; Franconia, famed for soft cheeses, Nippon, target of giant monsters; Suissebancara, with its gnome-guarded vault – but the proudest republic of the world was Merika, reigning supreme in the steaming west.”

    And who should arrive, saddled atop a blue donkey, into the “most wicked and corrupt of cities, where every word uttered was a lie, and every soul was for sale,” but none other than Barack the Barbarian! Hey, some of us still have to call “… wanton, waspish, willful Warshingtun” home!

    With Manny the Fixer at his side, Barack is ready to fight for change and overthrow the wicked wizards who have brought the great country to chaotic ruin. Together with the mighty Hilaria and her own sidekick, “has-been Bill,” it’s a mad race to the top of the Elephant Tower. Hot on their trail is The Old Warrior and Red Sarah, the fighting queen of the north: “I respected him – ’til he teamed up with her,” one of the bar brawlers notes. Even as Boosh the Dim and his Vizier, Harry Burden, try to destroy all the evidence of their corrupt, despotic reign, they are no match for the can-do determination of Barack the Barbarian!

    How can you possibly resist such a glorious tale??!!

    Readers: Young Adult, Adult

    Published: 2009

    Filed under: ..Adult Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Fiction, .Graphic Novels/Memoir/Manga/Manwha, Japanese American, Nonethnic-specific Tagged: Adventure, Historical, Politics

  • Snakes Can’t Run: A Mystery by Ed Lin

    Timing is everything, right? Last weekend, I had our teenage daughter and a friend of hers wandering NYC, and we happened to do the fabulous, downloadable Soundwalk/Chinatown walking tour narrated by Chinatown native Jami Gong – all three of us were attached to one iPod via three-way splitter, trying to navigate around others’ umbrellas in the pouring rain. I had done the walking tour years before … and wasn’t too surprised that a few things had changed, but the walk through the back alleys and secret corners was still as entertaining. Would recommend it highly to anyone and everyone.

    So how fortuitous that I also happened to be reading Snakes Can’t Run, in which Ed Lin takes readers back to 1976 Chinatown to solve another mystery with Robert Chow. Newly inspired, I hurried back to finish Lin’s third novel, feeling like I was truly just there among the quickly-turning pages.

    As the token Chinese American cop in New York, Chow – who made his debut in Lin’s second novel, This Is a Bust – has finally gone from Chinatown ribbon-cutting ceremonies to fulltime detective. He’s still fighting his personal demons: memories of death and destruction as a Vietnam War vet – something he shares with his NYPD partner Vandyne – not to mention his not-so-long ago alcoholic binges from which he’s still recovering.

    When two corpses turn up under the Brooklyn Bridge, Chow’s investigation eventually leads him to chasing down illegal immigrant smugglers, otherwise known as snakeheads who traffic in human flesh. In between, he listens to his partner’s marital woes, deals with his over-demanding mother, helps his erudite girlfriend escape a lifelong Chinatown career, and tries desperately to keep his childhood friend and Vietnam vet Don from completely losing what little is left of his sanity. But the American-born Chow’s greatest challenge is in facing his own family’s troubling illegal immigrant past.

    Chow and Vandyne team up with a San Francisco import, a fellow Chinese American detective, who makes California sound like Asian American nirvana … but even if you can take a man out of Chinatown, Chow proves you can’t really take Chinatown out of that man, especially a Chinatown cop.

    P.S. Patrick Radden Keefe’s The Snakehead makes for a fabulous nonfiction companion title, about one of the most notorious, worldwide snakehead operations in recent history.

    Readers: Adult

    Published: 2010

    Filed under: ..Adult Readers, .Fiction, Chinese American Tagged: Assimilation, Civil rights, Cultural exploration, Father/son relationship, Friendship, Identity, Immigration, Love, Mystery, Parent/child relationship, Politics, Race, Refugees

  • It Is Well with My Soul: The Extraordinary Life of a 106-Year-Old Woman by Ella Mae Johnson with Patricia Mulcahy

    “Some of the things in this book happened a hundred years ago…. I never anticipated having to remember all this,” says Ella Mae Cheeks Johnson as she opens her memoir, It Is Well with My Soul: The Extraordinary Life of a 106-Year-Old Woman, written with Patricia Mulcahy. Über-centenarian Johnson recalled more than most people half her age. Sadly, her readers can’t expect a sequel to her delightfully plain-spoken memoir as she passed away on March 22. (The memoir’s original publication date in May was quickly pushed up, making the book available now.)

    Born Jan. 13, 1904, in Dallas at a time when “black citizens had no official papers,” Johnson was raised by her next-door neighbors, the Davis family, after the death of her mother. “Everything in the Davis environment left me certain I was loved,” she writes.

    Yet despite a nurturing home environment, in many ways Johnson’s early years were harsh ones. Growing up poor but never needy, she couldn’t escape the helpless humiliation faced by “blacks, or Negroes, or colored people, or whatever they called us.” She watched as “some things were out of Papa’s control,” how adults “had to lie in order to survive,” and the “many ways in which we were put in our place in the Jim Crow South.”

    Johnson graduated salutatorian to her valedictorian best friend from Dallas Colored High School and, in 1921, entered Fisk University, a historically African- American college in Tennessee. During an art class in her senior year, Johnson painted a copy of a picture based on the biblical story of the “The Good Samaritan”: “My entire life has been driven by my emotional and spiritual response to the picture, and the message of compassion it communicates,” she writes.

    Johnson finished Fisk six months later than anticipated because she missed a semester participating in a college-wide boycott orchestrated by legendary Fisk graduate W.E.B. Du Bois who “agitate[d] for the rights of his people, whatever they wanted to call us – Negro, colored, black.” Lest you think Johnson a lemming, even in a clear battle for civil rights, she feistily adds, “I don’t follow just because someone else decides to lead.”

    After working briefly for the Congregational Church in Raleigh, North Carolina, Johnson arrived in Ohio – where she would live the rest of her life – as one of only two minority students admitted each year at Western Reserve University’s School of Applied Social Science. Decades later, the school was renamed Case Western Reserve University, and Johnson was recognized (until her recent death) as the oldest living African-American graduate of CWRU. … [click here for more]

    Review: Christian Science Monitor, April 2, 2010

    Readers: Young Adult, Adult

    Published: 2010

    Filed under: ..Adult Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Memoir, .Nonfiction, African American Tagged: Civil rights, Family, Friendship, Historical, Parent/child relationship, Race

  • Forget Sorrow: An Ancestral Tale by Belle Yang

    Already lauded for her exquisitely illustrated family stories – Baba: A Return to China Upon My Father’s Shoulders, The Odyssey of a Manchurian, as well as numerous children’s titles – Yang debuts her first-ever graphic memoir, a multi-layered creation that details her own story of becoming an artist/writer finely interwoven with the family tales her father shares with her.

    Gravely threatened by an abusive, dangerous stalker boyfriend soon after college, Yang and her parents are forced to drastically readjust their lives. Yang finds temporary escape in China, where she immerses herself in traditional Chinese traditional painting. One of her teachers there is Deng Lin, the daughter of Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping. Wandering and sketching the wide country, Yang meets the scattered relatives who will help reconstruct the challenging lives of her extended ancestors when she returns home to the California coast.

    Day after day, night after night, Yang listens to her father tell his captivating stories, from the family’s epic beginnings as “the dregs of Chinese society” as butchers and opera singers to prominent members of the landed scholar-gentry class, to the fraternal fighting that eventually shatters the family’s landed position, to their near destruction during the 20th-century Communist terror. Yang draws strength from her ancestors, finding her own power to claim the very unique voice someone else tried so hard to destroy.

    Yang, whose Chinese name Xuan means “forget sorrow,” was presciently named by her storyteller father … in hoping to forget his own sorrow of familial suffering as he delights in the promise of his daughter, so too, does that daughter learn to finally let her own sorrows go by creating a memorable testament to that ancestral past. With her latest title, Yang has most definitely found a medium that perfectly blends her many talents, creating a most unforgettable feast for us lucky readers.

    Readers: Young Adult, Adult

    Published: 2010

    Filed under: ..Adult Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Graphic Novels/Manga/Manwha, .Memoir, .Nonfiction, Chinese American Tagged: Cultural exploration, Cultural Revolution in China, Family, Grandparents, Historical, Identity, Parent/child relationship, Personal transformation

  • The Fast Runner: Filming the Legend of Atanarjuat by Michael Robert Evans

    What ironic timing to discover Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner, the 2001 Cannes Film Festival Caméra d’Or Award winner about two Inuit brothers – one murdered, the other who escapes by running naked over vast ice – during the 2010 Snowpocalypse. One of Canada’s top 10 grossing films, Atanarjuat marks a milestone in Canadian film history as “the first feature-length film written, directed, and produced by Inuit moviemakers.” Evans (associate dean, journalism, Indiana Univ.; Isuma: Inuit Video Art), in this first volume in the University of Nebraska Press’s new “Indigenous Films” series, posits that Atanarjuat is not only an epic story but also reclaims Inuit history, traditions, and images that have long been mired in outsiders’ stereotypical misrepresentations. Both the film and this book highlight and honor the Inuits’ ingenious ability to thrive in extreme conditions.

    Verdict: Repetition mires Evans’s potentially illuminating treatise – the film summary in Chapter 5 is alluded to so many times that the reader wonders why it doesn’t open the book. Perhaps reiteration is necessary to allow academic audiences to choose pertinent chapters rather than read the whole book. Interested readers might benefit more from watching the film, which is not nearly as difficult to understand as Evans insists.

    Review: “Performing Arts,” Library Journal, April 1, 2010

    Readers: Adult

    Published: 2010

    Filed under: ..Adult Readers, .Nonfiction, Canadian, Native American Tagged: Betrayal, Cultural exploration, Family, Film studies, Love, Nature, Siblings

  • Secret Asian Man: The Daily Days by Tak Toyoshima

    Art director for an alternative city paper by day, comics artist whenever he has the time, SAM (Secret Asian Man, yes!) – not so unlike his own creator Tak Toyoshima – fights stereotypes when he can, makes biting commentaries when frustrated, and generally tries to get along in his diverse world. His cousin Simon challenges him, his best friend Charlie hangs with him, his hapa son Shin inspires him, and thank goodness his Irish/Italian wife keeps him grounded.

    Over the five years that Secret Asian Man ran daily under United Features Syndicate, Osamu “SAM” Takahashi – “You got Ellis Islanded,” his son’s preschool teacher points out! – watches his best friend Charlie build one invention after another and finally hit it big, survive cuts and layoffs and creative differences at his alternative paper, witnesses history being made with Obama’s victory (and wonders when an APA President might be a reality), somehow survives the economic downturns, celebrates his son’s growing sense of mixed identity, repeatedly debates a city vs. suburb future with his suburban-raised wife, shakes his head when his annoying cousin finally gets a girlfriend (named Grace Lee – everyone knows a Grace Lee, right?), and generally tries to stay a positive, supportive friend, father, and husband.

    Collected for the first time in this single entertaining volume, SAM’s adventures can be read in a single sitting, or strip by strip as they were meant to be. Toyoshima advises, “… feel free to jump around, dog ear pages, cut out favorites or give them to your kids to color.” When you’re finished, put your withdrawl worries to rest … SAM’s adventures don’t end on page 231 – you can keep following him at secretasianman.com or check in with SAM’s creator at Toyoshima’s regularly updated blog.

    Readers: Young Adult, Adult

    Published: 2009

    Filed under: ..Adult Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Fiction, .Graphic Novels/Manga/Manwha, Japanese American Tagged: Civil rights, Cultural exploration, Family, Father/son relationship, Friendship, Love, Mixed-race issues, Parent/child relationship, Politics

  • Tell Us We’re Home by Marina Budhos

    In a tony New Jersey suburb, artistic Jaya, outspoken Lola, and shy Maria find an instant bond with each other, recognizing their outsider experiences of being the daughters of immigrant mothers who work as housekeepers and nannies for the wealthy families of their eighth-grade classmates.

    Jaya Lal and her mother left their warm home in Trinidad after the death of her beloved father, joining family already settled in the Bronx; they’ve come to Meadowbrook for the fresh air, the better schools, in addition to the possibility of better opportunities. Lola Svetloski lives with her deadbeat father who was once a brilliant engineer back in Slovakia, her overworked mother trying her best to keep the family together, and her could-to-be-a-model older sister. Maria Alvarez is part of a large extended family originally from Mexico, whose single-parent mother relies on her a little too much.

    When Jaya’s mother’s favorite employer suffers a serious stroke and she is unexpectedly accused of theft, even Jaya is unsure of how to react. Lola’s overzealous desire to help initially causes more trouble than provides assistance, while Maria’s sudden rich-boy-crazy-blindness couldn’t come at a worse time.

    Alternating three distinct points of view, Budhos explores the evolving friendship with unwavering clarity. The true strength of Budhos’ latest young adult novel (check out Ask Me No Questions for another memorable read), lies in her resolute ability to never settle for easy answers or convenient happy endings.

    Readers: Middle Grade, Young Adult

    Published: 2010

    Filed under: ..Middle Grade Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Fiction, European, Indian American, Latino/a, South Asian American Tagged: Coming-of-age, Family, Friendship, Haves vs. have-nots, Immigration, Mother/daughter relationship, Parent/child relationship

  • City of Spies by Susan Kim and Laurence Klavan, artwork by Pascal Dizin

    Young Evelyn gets dumped at her surprised aunt’s posh NYC penthouse so her neglectful father can take yet another honeymoon with the latest young wife. Evelyn’s managed to escape her lonely life by creating her very own manga series, “The Amazing Adventures of Zirconium Man and Scooter!,” not surprisingly in which her two superheroes resemble her missing father and herself – certainly an honor her neglectful father so doesn’t deserve!

    Now spending the summer with her artistic, free-spirited Aunt Lia, Evelyn finds a real-live friend in Tony, the building super’s mischievous son. Once she gets over her initial shock of having a young person in her space, Aunt Lia proves to be quite a supportive ally … and has a few adventures of her own, thanks to her new young roommate. Out in the big city, America is at war with Germany and everyone seems suspicious, especially to highly imaginative kids like Evelyn and Tony … but this time, their suspicions end up saving the country!

    Clever and inventive, Kim and Klavan offer middle grade readers both a fast-moving adventure with some important history lessons thrown in. Great combination for reluctant young readers … not to mention a not-so-subtle reminder to parents who might need a nudge or two regarding their younger responsibilities. AHEM to that!

    Readers: Middle Grade

    Published: 2010

    Filed under: ..Middle Grade Readers, .Fiction, .Graphic Novels/Manga/Manwha, Jewish, Korean American, Nonethnic-specific Tagged: Adventure, Betrayal, Family, Friendship, Girl power, Historical, Parent/child relationship, Politics, War

  • Hello Kitty Must Die by Angela S. Choi

    What a fast-paced, can’t put-down, biting, over-the-top debut! You’ll have to read it for the body count alone … I couldn’t keep track after the first dozen or so, ahem! I admit it: my math skills are definitely challenged! Who knew murder and mayhem could be sooooo entertaining??!! Young fiction newbie Angela S. Choi certainly knows how to keep you turning the pages, wide-eyed for a few, then guffawing over the next.

    In spite of being a Yale-educated corporate lawyer with her killer Jimmy Choos and Armani wardrobe, Fiona Yu remains the dutiful Chinese American daughter, virginally unmarried, who still lives at home with her pushy immigrant parents. No matter how much she hates Hello Kitty for her “clawless, fangless, voiceless, with that placid, blank expression topped by a pink ribbon”-representation of the perfect subservient Asian female, Fi can’t seem to liberate herself “from the confines of tradition, culture, and family.”

    She can’t stand the blind dates her parents send her on, but she can’t seem to get beyond three dates with anyone of her own choosing. She’s convinced her virginity is in the way, decides to deal with that little problem her very own way, and discovers she’s missing something she really does want. Off she goes in search of … reconstruction of sorts … and surprisingly, gleefully reunites with her bad-boy childhood best friend who’s reinvented himself as a prominent plastic surgeon with morals all his own! His is a whole different sort of Hippocratic oath, shall we say?

    The book is scheduled to release next week … go get on the pre-order list right now. You’ll thank me for sure!

    Readers: Adult

    Published: 2010

    Filed under: ..Adult Readers, .Fiction, Chinese American Tagged: Cultural exploration, Death, Family, Friendship, Love, Mystery, Parent/child relationship

  • Pluto: Urasawa x Tezuka 008 by Naoki Urasawa and Osamu Tezuka, co-authored by Takashi Nagasaki, with the cooperation of Tezuka Productions

    Oh, tell me it ain’t so … Can this REALLY be the final volume of Urasawa’s fabulous Pluto series? B-b-b-but … Urasawa’s Monster went on for 17 volumes, and 20th Century Boys is still going strong at volume 7 … how could Pluto already be finished with 008, boo hooo??!!

    So read and weep, dear fans … even if they’re tears of bittersweet joy …

    Final volume 008 opens with a newly reawakened Atom – with eyes so gorgeously haunting – as he finally solves the formula for the antiproton bomb, “a recipe for world destruction.” Atom’s been inserted with the late great p0lice-robot’s Gesicht’s memory chip, whose brutal final moments were marked by something robots aren’t supposed to feel – hatred. But as one of the world’s seven great super-robots, Gesicht’s capabilities went far beyond his actual programming. So, too, Atom’s abilities are limitless … even as he is the very last hope for the human race.

    “Do you think we’ll ever live in a world free from hate?” he asks for us all. Urasawa’s thinly disguised treatise against the so-called ‘war on terror’ – the United States of Thracia vs. Persia – proves to be a remarkable, memorable eight-volume prayer for peace.

    Readers: Young Adult, Adult

    Published: 2010 (United States)
    PLUTO © Naoki Urasawa/Studio Nuts, Takashi Nagasaki, and Tezuka Productions
    Original Japanese edition published by Shogakukan Inc.
    Based on Astro Boy by Osamu Tezuka

    Filed under: ..Adult Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Graphic Novels/Manga/Manwha, .Translation, Japanese Tagged: Adventure, Betrayal, Identity, Mystery, Politics, War

  • The Poker Bride: The First Chinese in the Wild West by Christopher Corbett

    The Poker Bride: The First Chinese in the Wild West, by Christopher Corbett, is an oddly disturbing read, not so much for its content but for its publication as a historical text about Asian American pioneer woman Polly Bemis, Corbett’s eponymous “poker bride.”

    Problems with historical reliability begin with the cover, which features a young Asian woman with a 1920s “flapper” haircut. Bemis’ American story begins in the 1870s when a teenage Bemis illegally arrived as an intended prostitute, and ends in the 1930s, when she died at 80. Not only are the 1920s not prominent in the book, but Bemis also couldn’t have resembled the cover picture at any point in her life.

    Corbett explores the arrival of Chinese in the American West who were eager to find Gold Rush wealth during the latter half of the 19th century. They faced miserable hardships because of inhumane working conditions, and rampant racism. Chinese women arrived in fewer numbers, which, Corbett posits, gave rise to prostitution: “Prostitution flourished because of the enormous imbalance between men, both white and Chinese, and women in early California. … The disproportion was greatest among the immigrant Chinese.”

    The Chinese sex slave trade thrived: By 1890, “1,769 Chinese females over the age of fifteen were living in San Francisco – and 1,452 (82%) were prostitutes.”

    Corbett claims that Chinese were “sojourners” – travelers passing through hoping quick fortunes would allow them to return home in grandeur. Many Asian American scholars argue that this is an incorrect assumption, citing the significant numbers of “grandfather” communities comprised of single men who eventually died out rather than return “home.” Anti-Asian immigration barriers prevented these men from bringing over their families or finding a Chinese spouse in the United States. They were further barred from creating families because of anti-miscegenation laws that made marrying non-Chinese women impossible.

    Corbett’s pages contain little new information, and, in truth, a number of works cited in his bibliography are ultimately better choices, including Sucheng Chan’s Entry Denied: Exclusion and the Chinese Community in America, 1882-1943 and Judy Yung’s Unbound Feet: A Social History of Chinese Women in San Francisco.

    Bemis only appears in Corbett’s short preface and a few later chapters. For readers interested in Bemis’ remarkable experiences, more illuminating options include Priscilla Wegars’ biography for children Polly Bemis: A Chinese American Pioneer and Ruthanne Lum McCunn’s historical novel Thousand Pieces of Gold.

    Which begs the question, why read a third-hand account about Bemis when more accurate choices exist? For example, McCunn convincingly argues that since Bemis did not marry Charlie Bemis until many years after the alleged gambling victory, she technically was not a poker bride; instead, Charlie married Polly to prevent her from being deported as a result of the 1892 Geary Act, which required legal Chinese residents to carry a certificate of admission, something Polly lacked. Despite Idaho’s anti-miscegenation laws, the Bemises were wed by a white judge who himself was married to an Indian. None of this is in Corbett’s book, although ironically, he cites McCunn’s work.

    Poker bride or not, Bemis is a fascinating character who deserves more than Corbett’s latest title. Readers should look elsewhere to resurrect her.

    Review: San Francisco Chronicle, March 20, 2010

    Readers: Adult

    Published: 2010

    Filed under: ..Adult Readers, .Nonfiction, Chinese American Tagged: Civil rights, Cultural exploration, Friendship, Historical, Identity, Immigration, Personal transformation, Politics, Race

  • Nothing to Envy: Ordinary Lives in North Korea by Barbara Demick

    Barbara Demick, currently the Beijing bureau chief for the Los Angeles Times, spent five years as Seoul’s bureau chief where she had unprecedented access to North Koreans. Her interviews, which began in 2001, eventually became Nothing to Envy, a mind-boggling, heartbreaking, surreal-ly humanizing portraits of six North Koreans and their lives on either side of the infamous DMZ that divides the two Koreas.

    Interwoven with the fascinating personal stories is the grueling history of North Korea from its post-Korean War state as a paragon of Communism initially propped up by the Soviet Union and China, to the nepotistic changeover from Kim Il Sung to his son Kim Jong Il, to the country’s deathly collapse in the 1990s that led to massive starvation for its citizens, to the totalitarian regime which still somehow manages to stay in power even with the capitalistic transformations of its former Communist neighbors and supporters.

    Demick takes her ironic title from a North Korean propaganda song that all children must learn: “… We will do as the Party tells us. / We have nothing to envy in this world.” Indeed, the power of brainwashing is astonishing as citizens believe with all their heart that North Korea is the best place to live, led by a god who keeps his citizens safe and free from the degradations caused by evil Americans.

    In this controlled climate, chaste star-crossed young lovers, Mi-ran and Jun-sang, meet and court, hidden nightly from prying eyes by the complete darkness because most of North Korea lives without electricity. Their love-story-of-sorts drives the book, intertwined with the stories of four others – a Party-line toe-ing local leader, her daughter who refuses to be blinded by the government’s impossible claims, an orphan boy desperate to seek any opportunity that will lead to a meal, and an idealistic doctor who is ever-grateful for her free medical training until she realizes she can no longer save her patients’ lives.

    Demick’s most notable accomplishment is in capturing individual real stories from the millions who have become statistics – horrifying, tragic statistics, albeit, but still more numbers than humans. Demick gives voice to Mrs. Song who watches her husband and son shrivel and die and still she polishes the required portraits of the Great Leader, to Dr. Kim who can never forget the eyes of her youngest patients she could not help, to Mi-ran who still sees the near-corpses she forced herself to walk by because she knew they were far beyond helping. Readers will not be able turn away as Demick’s defectors finally journey from North to South, where new challenges await …

    My mother’s family is North Korean. As I was surrounded by maternally extended family as a small child when learning Korean, then maturing into an English-dominant speaking adult, my palate (and vocabulary) remains stuck in 1960s Pyongyang Korean even decades and decades later. My mother’s immediate family, plus a paternal aunt and her family were the only relatives who escaped Pyongyang before the country split in two. Demick’s book makes we wonder again and again, ‘are these my relatives?’ And surely, I am reminded once more the luck involved in the accident of birth and all the things we can and must do to make a more equitable world …

    One quibble I must add that doesn’t have to do with the book exactly … I listened to the audible version of Demick’s book, read by Karen White. With some 66 million Korean speakers in the world, why oh why do producers think butchering someone else’s language is okay? White did an otherwise fine job of reading, but one phone call to a Korean-speaker could have prevented parts of the recording from being downright embarrassing (and insulting). Demick must be rolling her eyes. White, of course, is not alone …  Shelly Frasier who reads Planet India, Nathaniel Parker who reads the Artemis Fowl series … I could go on and on and on …

    Readers: Adult

    Published: 2009

    Filed under: ..Adult Readers, .Nonfiction, Korean Tagged: Cultural exploration, Family, Friendship, Haves vs. have-nots, Identity, Love, Mother/daughter relationship, Parent/child relationship, Personal transformation, Politics, Refugees, War

  • Half Life by Roopa Farooki

    I don’t know why the galley’s back cover touts “shades of Slumdog Millionaire and The Namesake” because this book has no overlaps with either of those titles, much less their authors, or even locations! Really, not all brown people look alike – authors or their characters! Slumdog (based on the even-better than-film book Q&A)  is a Mumbai story by an Indian diplomat now based in South Africa. Namesake (with the film version better than the original book) is about an immigrant Indian family and their American-born son by a Brooklyn-based Indian American.

    And don’t even get me started on the cover – it represents no one in the book, much less any situation within the book’s pages!

    All that superfluous stuff aside, once you get about 30 pages or so into Half Life to familiarize yourself with the three alternating voices, you’ll probably not be able to put it down. Roopa Farooki, a Pakistani-born, London-reared, Oxford-educated, southeast UK/southwest France-domiciled author of three previous novels, follows a pair of lost lovers and a father from London to Singapore to Kuala Lumpur, with memory stops throughout the South Asian subcontinent.

    “It’s time to stop fighting, and go home,” Aruna reads in a poetry collection one morning partway through breakfast in her London flat. And that’s exactly what she does. With only her purse and passport in hand – at least she changed out of her sleepwear – she leaves her house keys, her too-adoring doctor husband of a year who has already left for work, and their London flat that was never a home. She heads to Heathrow in a daze and boards a plane to Singapore. On the other side awaits her past – Jazz, her childhood best friend and lover since adolescence, the first person she left without a word. Meanwhile, in a Kuala Lumpur hospital, Jazz’s elderly father Hassan desperately awaits his son’s forgiveness for untold secrets so he can finally be free of his painful life.

    Together, Aruna and Jazz must figure out who they are, especially who they are to each other. While she’s managed to wean herself from the harder drugs, Aruna’s addictive habits keep her not quite balancing on the right side of alcoholic smoker and sex addict; self-medication is clearly not working. Jazz has shut down his own heart, squandering his literary talents and churning out one exotic-setting, happy-ending romance after another. His father, a lauded poet, is fighting his failing body, hoping to stay alive just long enough to tell his son the truth of his relationship with his son’s late mother. With so many swirling secrets, you’ll probably guess one or two along the way … but don’t get too comfortable, because Farooki is very adept at turning your expectations upside down yet again …

    Half Life debuts in May, so hopefully the galley’s back page at the very least proves to be just a temporary marker and the publishing-powers will realize Farooki’s original work can very-well-thank-you-very-much stand all on its own.

    Readers: Adult

    Published: 2010

    Filed under: ..Adult Readers, .Fiction, British Asian, Pakistani, South Asian Tagged: Betrayal, Family, Father/son relationship, Friendship, Identity, Love, Parent/child relationship, Siblings

  • Slightly Behind and to the Left: Four Stories & Three Drabbles by Claire Light

    I used to think of myself as a well-rounded reader … I read just about anything, although I’m the first to admit that my little brain really struggles with poetry 99.9% of the time. But the one thing, I recently realized, I definitely don’t read much of is science fiction … A Wrinkle in Time twice around as a child and then as a mother listening to the audible version with my own young ‘uns is not enough. Apparently, it’s now just ’sf’ – not spelled out – but I’m so old, I’m just getting to the lingo.

    So Claire Light’s slim, bright little book threw me for a loop for sure. It’s not just sf (see? I’m using my new lingo in a sentence!) … Light’s genre-of-choice is “feminist sf”! Co-founder and still-blogger for Hyphen magazine, Light is no stranger to the literary … she just writes from another universe to which we earthbound have to catch up.

    The collection opens with a shocker titled “Vacation,” a way-in-the-future Amazonia where all the adult men have disappeared. Gone. Poof. Left behind are only the boys … “but with the older ones, if you looked away sometimes, they wouldn’t be there when you looked back.” Women take to “prowling” for the not-yet-matured young males … the story couldn’t be more disturbing to read for a mother with a tween son, that’s for sure. “Pigs in Space” is another spine-chiller, about two workers who run an outer space pig farm (the ultimate in genetic engineering!). Their painstakingly monitored existence has no allowance for (inevitable) error, and only the most drastic calculations will ensure survival.

    The last two stories prove interlinked: in “Pinball Effect,” a single human is temporarily allowed by his “Abductors” on to F&***rk, not unlike Earth but missing any gravity, where he loves and loses the elusive “O#%M#T; in “Abducted by Aliens!” that now-returned-to-Earth single human being’s story is recalled decades later through the lens of his sister’s memory.

    In the Afterword, Light admits “A childish part of me wants you to just get it,” and she goes on to explain the ultimate alien Asian American experience of Japanese American imprisonment during World War II: “Abducted by Aliens’ is an experiment with conveying the experience of only half-understanding hidden history because no one will come out and explain it to you.” Indeed, while her readers are the ones who are ’slightly behind,’ Light is … can’t resist … light years ahead reinventing the Asian American experience, feminist sf-style.

    Readers: Adult

    Published: 2009

    Filed under: ..Adult Readers, .Short Stories, Chinese American, Hapa Tagged: Adventure, Betrayal, Family, Identity, Politics, Race

  • Three Sisters by Bi Feiyu

    Although the cover of Bi’s novel displays a character for “triple happiness” – ostensibly representing the eponymous three sisters – readers shouldn’t expect a happily-ever-after tale. After seven daughters, Party Secretary Wang sees his self-esteem redeemed with the birth of a son. Firstborn Yumi, the de facto matriarch, reclaims the family’s dignity by parading the prized baby before her father’s mistresses. But Wang’s philandering shatters Yumi’s own marriage prospects, and Yumi leaves the constrictive Wang Family Village as the lesser second wife of an older city official. Third sister Yuxiu eventually joins Yumi’s household, having nowhere else to go as she is “ruined” after being brutally gang-raped. The promise of an education helps seventh sister Yuyang escape, but her academic career is hardly stellar.

    Verdict: Bi (The Moon Opera) is an award-winning Chinese novelist and screenwriter, but his presumptive efforts to capture the three sisters’ deepest thoughts and feelings prove superficial and unconvincing. Readers interested in the challenging lives of China’s ordinary citizens during the Cultural Revolution will better appreciate such resonating titles as Yiyun Li’s The Vagrants, Yu Hua’s Chronicle of a Blood Merchant, or Xinran’s nonfiction The Good Women of China.

    Review: “Fiction,” Library Journal, March 15, 2010

    Readers: Adult

    Published: 2010

    Filed under: ..Adult Readers, .Fiction, .Translation, Chinese Tagged: Betrayal, Coming-of-age, Cultural Revolution in China, Family, Haves vs. have-nots, Parent/child relationship, Siblings

  • Seaglass Summer by Anjali Banerjee

    When her parents take their annual summer trip to India, 11-year-old Poppy decides it’s the perfect chance to spend a month with her veterinarian Uncle Sanjay who runs an animal clinic on Nisqually Island off Washington’s coast. How else can she learn to be a vet, too, especially since her allergy-suffering mother has a no-pets policy at home.

    Uncle Sanjay, who’s rather like a rock star on the idyllic island with his easy manner and his saving skills, is a patient teacher who teaches Poppy that being a vet means much more than holding puppies and cuddling felines. Her summer is not without challenges, from learning to deal with real blood and other yucky stuff, testing new friendships, and learning the sometimes high cost of following your dreams.

    Anjali Banerjee’s latest for middle-grade readers is another breezy fun read with just enough heartfelt moments that will make even us wizened adults shed a tear or two. Banerjee’s own devotion to her furry loved ones (the book is dedicated to her beloved late kitty Monet) is certainly evident, especially when she writes about Uncle Sanjay’s regular patient, Marmalade, an elderly cat whom Uncle Sanjay must soon help cross over to a peaceful afterlife. As the former guardian of four legendary kitties (our practice children before the human ones finally came along), I admit I sniffled and sobbed … who knew I was so schmaltzy in my old age?!

    Tidbit: Anjali Banerjee was one of our many wonderful guests for SALTAF 2005 [South Asian Literary and Theater Arts Festival]. Mark your calendars for SALTAF 2010 which happens Saturday, November 13, 2010!

    Readers: Middle Grade

    Published: 2010

    Filed under: ..Middle Grade Readers, .Fiction, Indian American, South Asian American Tagged: Coming-of-age, Family, Friendship, Pets/Animals

  • Translucent (vol. 3) by Kazuhiro Okamoto, translated by Heidi Plechl

    The adventures of Shizuka Shiroyama and her two best sidekicks, strong-willed Okouchi and ever-cheerful Tadami, continues in this third installment with some guilty feelings, a heartwarming wedding, and dealing with a meddlesome doctor’s awkward attempts at matchmaking because she still can’t get over her own lost first love. Shizuka endures a naked search for a missing notebook, hopes to meet a superstar actress visiting her school, and tries to use her Translucent Syndrome to help a suffering family make peace with their past.

    Not everything works out the way Shizuka expects, but she’s never one to shirk challenges … and in spite of disappointments and frustrations, especially as she fades at the most inopportune moments, Shizuka knows she has her friends and family to boost her up whenever she needs a little something extra.

    Without ever being too preachy, manga creator Okamoto presents an easy balance between big life lessons and just plain fun. Translucent is just what the angst-filled, hormone-driven, overdramatic, young teenage reader will surely enjoy.

    Readers: Middle Grade, Young Adult

    Published: 2008 (United States)

    Filed under: ..Middle Grade Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Fiction, .Graphic Novels/Manga/Manwha, .Translation, Japanese Tagged: Coming-of-age, Friendship, Illness, Love