Beyond Illusions: A Novel by Duong Thu Huong, translated by Nina McPherson and Phan Huy Duong [in aMagazine: Inside Asian America]
Love story gone wrong about an over-idealistic woman who becomes disillusioned with her weak husband's reality and becomes the mistress of a has-been, philandering conductor desperate to get back in the spotlight.
Review: <a href="http://bookdragonreviews.wordpress.com/files/2009/08/amagazine-2002-0203-new-and-notable.pdf"...
A Filipino family and friends struggle to survive the brutal Japanese occupation during World War II.
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First-ever memoir available in English about the horrors of surviving and escaping the brutal Communist labor camps of closed, barren North Korea.
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Unbridled capitalism exposed with wit, humor, and even a little self-deprecation.
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Visually stunning look at the first hundred years of San Francisco's Chinatown, from 1850 to 1950.
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Letters from Ogura to his young wife, who survived the actual bombing of Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, only to die of radiation sickness...
Society in true color by
A top Hollywood makeup artist writes the first-ever beauty how-to that specifically addresses women of Asian descent. We must have already been too beautiful to need one sooner.
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Early 20th-century Japanese feminist poet's memorable road trip east. You go, girl!
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Feng’s title is ingeniously layered: “Screening Asian Americans” refers to at least three ways in which Asian Americans are screened – how they are evaluated, how their images are projected, and how...
This time, Feng gets the whole book to himself. And if you read nothing else about film, read this introduction. His questions about identity – who defines it, how it’s defined, can...
Part of the PocketEssentials series out the U.K., Ang Lee is one of the latest available additions to an eclectic mix of film-related titles. While it reads a bit like a glorified student project,...
Also from the PocketEssentials series. A quick guide to the man who single-handedly changed the face of martial arts films, from his San Francisco birth to his child actor days in Hong...
PocketEssentials again, published in the U.K. in 2000 and released here late last year. A compilation of interviews, articles, and reviews about Hong Kong’s “gangster gun operas” [as opposed to...
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.
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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...