New Chinese Cinema: Challenging Representations by Sheila Cornelius with Ian Haydn Smith [in Push > for NAATA]
Another slim volume that offers a concise, informative overview of mainland Chinese cinema, with a focus on the last half-decade. Chinese cinema history can be loosely summarized in six generations, beginning with...
A thoroughly enjoyable combination of memoir entwined with film, social, and political history by a professor from the prestigious Beijing Film Academy, which graduated the...
Richie, one of Japan’s most famous ex-patriots, points out in his introduction that some 90% of all Japanese films made before 1945 were destroyed, whether during the 1923...
We’re talking major tome – more than 800 pages devoted to a “joint biography” of two of the most famous names is film history. Because no single biography about either...
The ultimate guidebook to anime, set up just like an encyclopedia (hence the name), with detailed entries in alphabetical order. Quite an impressive, amazing feat.
Review:
The most difficult of the titles, although its premise is interesting – that the history of Japanese film is inextricably linked to the history of Japanese capitalism, both of which are approximately...
Forget Hollywood, hello Bollywood: With 12 million people going to the movies every day from a potential audience of a billion, India is home to the largest film industry in the entire world. The international phenomenon...
Part of the British Film Institute’s Film Classics, a series which highlights 360 landmark films from throughout the world, this volume focuses on one of India’s enduring classics. Released in October 1957, Mother India...
One of the latest in the Pocketessentials series. And the perfect last title – a book devoted to how the enemy Asian alien is portrayed in the white man’s film world. Caught...

The welcome return of Dictee, a seminal Korean American classic – part autobiography, part history, part art, part experimentation.
The Dream of the Audience, with essays by Whitney Museum curator Lawrence R. Rinder and theorist/filmmaker Trinh...
Lyrical debut about Korean American hapa, Fee, who survives child molestration, and the subsequent relationship he unwittingly falls into with his molestor’s teenage son.
Review:
Delightful debut about two teenage boys sent to be “re-educated” during Mao’s Cultural Revolution and their love for a local village girl and banned western literature.
Review:...
Groundbreaking, inspiring celebration of more than three decades of Asian American activism.
Review:
Intriguing, disturbing short story collection from the author of haunting Red Sorghum.
Review:
A writer tries to reconstruct the life of a childhood acquaintance – an ex-combat nurse during Vietnam – after her sudden suicide.
Review:
Asian American Studies guru captures 200 years of Asian Pacific American history. Together with the
Fluffy, dishy first novel based on Quan’s own experiences as an elite call girl in the big city.
Review:
Anthology of writings by Japan’s favorite American gaijin, credited with introducing Japanese film to the West.
Review: