May 11, 2022

Emiko Jean Shares 5 Books About the Asian-American Experience

Celebrate Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month with recommendations from the author of Tokyo Ever After

Emiko Jean Shares 5 Books About the Asian-American Experience

Celebrate Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month with recommendations from the author of Tokyo Ever After

From memoirs to short stories to young adult fiction, Emiko Jean reflects on how each book encapsulates the many facets of the Asian American experience. 

Minor Feelings: An Asian American Reckoning by Cathy Park Hong

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A collection of essays and a powerful book about Asian American identity told through history, psychology, and the author’s own personal accounts. It gives a voice to Asian Americans and deeply resonated with me, helping to articulate my feelings as a Japanese American woman. Hong also has a poetry background, and it shows while reading. The writing is honest, visceral, emotional, and well felt. It challenges perceptions and is a scorching anti-racist text that everyone should read.

We Are Not Free by Traci Chee

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This is a book I wish existed while I was a teenager. It is told from multiple points of view of young Nisei, second-generation Japanese American citizens, living during World War II. When I went to school, Japanese internment was a few lines in a textbook, and I felt deeply conflicted over this. I simply wanted more. More of an explanation and exploration of how pivotal the incarceration was for Japanese Americans and Asian Americans. Although it’s a historical novel, it is relevant today. What we don’t learn from our past, we are doomed to repeat it.

The Making of Asian America by Erika Lee

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An excellent, definitive non-fiction resource on the history of Asian Americans from the past to the present day. This is another text I wish had been available when I was growing up. It is a broad perspective on immigration, how many Asians ended up in the United States, and what they faced when they arrived. It sheds light on a blind spot in American history.

All You Can Ever Know by Nicole Chung

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In this memoir, Nicole Chung recounts her adoption by a white couple and her search for her Korean birth mother. With insights into transracial adoption and motherhood, this book is as absorbing as it is thought provoking. Chung’s existentialism is keenly felt and gently written about. It is a beautiful account of family and identity.

Interpreter of Maladies by Jhumpa Lahiri

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A truly gorgeous collection of short stories chronicling the everyday life of Indians and Indian Americans that I have read several times. It is both a study in the craft of writing and an experience outside of my own. The stories are loosely connected with themes of identity, displacement, and culture. It shows how even the simplest of lives are unique and special. Within the pages, I found an uplifting and hopeful read.

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Last summer, we joined Emiko Jean for a heartfelt summer adventure in Tokyo Ever After. If you were hoping to make a return trip, we’ve got just the scoop for you. Our sources at the Tokyo Tattler say save the date, May 31st. There’ll be a royal wedding in the sequel, Tokyo Dreaming, and you’re invited. It’s the perfect celebration to close out Asian American Heritage Month.

"'You’re a human,' I say. 'The machine can try to compress you into something two dimensional, digestible, but that’s not you. And we’re not here to service the machine."'

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"I just think that maybe happiness isn’t crossing a finish line, or finally meeting the right person or getting the right job or finding the right life. It’s the little things.”

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Our summer TBR is heating up ☀️ To kick it off, we are sharing the stacked June class of Reese’s Book Club! Which ones are you reading this season?
"There’s a certain kind of magic in picking up a book you just know will leave a mark." 

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"Even as my mind fades, I give my story to you, you who know in the same way that I know, their power. I have lived mine, and you have lived yours."

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Sun's out, book's out ☀️ Enjoying the sunshine with a book we can't put down, Stuck Up and Stupid by @angourierice & @katericewriter.
Want to know the secrets behind writing those heart-pounding romance novels? @yulin.kuang spills all on the first episode of Bookmarked. Tune in to learn about her approach to writing complex female characters in the realm of romance — it’s an art form we’re in awe of.

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