Hannah Is My Name by Belle Yang + Author Interview [in AsianWeek]
Belle Lettres for Kids What lovely serendipity that just as our oldest child started reading in 1999, one of my very favorite writers, Belle Yang, produced her first children’s...
Belle Lettres for Kids What lovely serendipity that just as our oldest child started reading in 1999, one of my very favorite writers, Belle Yang, produced her first children’s...
A fun little interactive book about tricks and treats for the youngest little hands to manipulate and giggle over. Review: "New and Notable Books," AsianWeek, October 8, 2004 Readers: Children Published: 2004...
A fascinating collection that examines the diversity and overlapping similarities of the contemporary Korean American experience, post-L.A.-riots and a century after the...
Oh, wow!! What a compelling debut novel: Lonely, orphaned Ramchand, cheated out of any inheritance, works in a small sari shop. His quiet existence is challenged by two extremes: the overindulged, hypocritical life of...
The latest in the exploration of Asian American identity by young voices. “How do we – that is, Asian Americans of our generation – understand our individual and collective identities?” ask...
An informative overview that includes history, memoir, and technique by a world-famous Ninja grandmaster. These ain’t no stunts: They’re the real thing! Review: "New and Notable Books," AsianWeek,...
Jen’s third novel is a bittersweet examination of the Wongs, a complicated Chinese American family with a father named Carnegie (!), a Caucasian mother called Blondie, two Asian adoptee daughters, and one towheaded birthson....
The looming question at the end of this fantastical novel is: “Is she or isn’t she?” Naoko and her young daughter Monami are one of the few to survive a horrific bus crash. But Naoko is fatally...
From the author of the devastating The Blue Bedspread comes another stunning, multilevel novel of human suffering and uneasy hope. The unique opening addresses...
An oddly compelling novella about a lonely man who never quite gets the girl – any girl – but is unwilling to give up trying. Indeed, few writers can do isolation quite like Kawabata, the Nobel-Prize-winning...
A collection of poems that captures the experiences of a Korean American writer living in two worlds – her native Korea, her contemporary America. Neither and both are quite home as she navigates the...
I hate the thought of weight training, but because my family history is filled with women with osteoporosis, this book seems like a wake-up call. It's even got...
The updated, expanded second edition to the 1993 title includes post-1945 achievements in the field, as well as expanding coverage of other artistic mediums, including calligraphy, ceramics, lacquerware, metalware, and...
This new edition of a bestselling classic biographical novel – should be on every student reading list! – includes a new essay, “Reclaiming Polly Bemis,” and discussion questions. <a href="http://www.mccunn.com/"...
The Tree Bride picks up where Desirable Daughters left off. Tara Chaterjee learns that she’s pregnant and under the care of a doctor with whom she shares an ancestral past....
“So may I clarify that tonight I speak as a subject of the American empire? I speak as a slave who presumes to criticize her king,” Roy says...
An examination of the formation of the Asian American community in San Diego – California’s second largest city and the sixth largest nationally – which numbers more than...
Returning to the Real World After the MacArthur Grant Han Ong, who made international headlines as one of the MacArthur Foundation’s elite “Genius Grant” recipients of 1997, refers to his second novel, The Disinherited, as...
Responding With Hope to Sept. 11 Three years after the tragic events of 9/11, Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni remains haunted not only by the vivid images of what happened, but also by the repercussions felt throughout...
This is a World War II story told from the other side – without that other side being demonized and made to seem inhuman. The book’s narrator meets an engineer who recalls...