Dinah! A Cat Adventure by Kae Nishimura [in AsianWeek]
A delightful tale – both comical and bittersweet – of a little cat who grows big, falls out a window, and gets lost. Outside in the big scary world, she is able...
A delightful tale – both comical and bittersweet – of a little cat who grows big, falls out a window, and gets lost. Outside in the big scary world, she is able...
A lonely red rubber ball is passed over by many, but finally finds a true friend. Delightful, fun pictures for the youngest readers. Review: "New and Notable Books," AsianWeek<a...
Yi-Min, the youngest, tiniest daughter of the Chinese Emperor, goes in search of prized white elephants with her father. In spite of her size – or lack thereof – she...
More than three decades after ‘Orientals' claimed their identities as Asian Americans in the late 1960s, the said moniker no longer encompasses this growing group of Americans whose one commonality...
The Monkey King, one of the most popular figures in Chinese folklore, returns to entertain young children with his boastful, talented, ingenious, entertaining adventures. “Today, I am introducing our wonderful Monkey King...
Okay, so I've been known to get on a soapbox more often than not about inauthentic voices usurping other people's identities, i.e. white men writing as Asian women, especially sets me off – oh,...
I confess I have no idea what really happened in this wacky novel, but it was nonetheless entertaining, if only because it's so totally indescribably unpredictable. From what I gathered, there's a love story...
Get ready to turn on all the lights, crawl into bed, and not get any sleep because the sequel to Ring (you know, mysterious videotape that kills in a week if you watch it)...
Listening to the Voices on the Street: A Profile of Performance Artist & Novelist Heather Woodbury What would eventually become What Ever: A Living Novel first began as a behemoth dare. In 1994, Heather Woodbury, a performance...
Silent No More: The Varsity Victory Volunteers of World War II Write what you know best” is the advice that writers probably hear most often. Franklin Odo, activist, academic, and museum curator extraordinaire, does exactly that. His latest title, No Sword...
With one of the best covers I’ve ever seen on an academic text, this diverse collection of essays explores the global phenomenon that was Pokémon (from “pocket monster,” in case you were...
An inventive debut collection of interconnected short stories about one Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (no, not that one), an itinerant actor with a vague resemblance to a criminal whom he once portrayed...
Lest I start babbling with incoherent glee about this book, just go out and buy it, borrow it, nab it, and read it – word for word, cover to cover. Lee writes in the voice of...
A down-to-earth account of one of the most inspiring women of our times. The memoir that world-renowned activist Yuri Kochiyama began to write at the age of 77 for her family, is...
Kim argues that the New Korean Cinema of the last two decades, which catapulted Korean films into the international spotlight, is finished as a movement. While the art-house flicks of...
“We are a nation of immigrants,” Hing states in his introduction. And certainly that is a factual statement. However, since the United States was established more than two...
Okay, would-be potters and wannabes like me … so maybe you won’t quite get the results these teachers do (can you say, “wow!”) – but you can hope. Oh, if...
While the premise of a young girl’s diary about surviving war in contemporary Iraq is promising – if not necessary in order to put an innocent human face to the so-called ‘war on terrorism’...
A humorous look at an endearing, rambunctious young boy’s promises of all the things he will not do on the very last day of...
When the carnival comes to town, all the engines help set up the tents and rides together. While Choo Choo Charlie doesn’t like being bossed around, he learns that even the smallest...