Asian-American Books


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Asian-American Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Asian-American
Lane With No Name: Memoirs and Poetry by a Malaysian-Chinese Girl (Three Continents Press)
Published in Paperback by Three Continents Pr (1997-03)
Author: Hilary Tham
List price: $16.95
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Collectible price: $41.75

Average review score:

Multi-cultural to the Umpty-Umpth
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-06
I've read (and own) all of Hilary Tham's books. Most of them are volumes of poetry, wise, lucid, direct, witty poems. In her poems, Hilary is a great story teller, so it should be no surprise that her first prose work, a memoire, is moving and rich. The material of her life is, in itself, intriguing: She's Chinese, but raised as part of a Chinese minority in Malaysia, married an American Peace Corp. member, converted to his faith and became active in her synagogue in the U.S. Besides her Chinese background (with its stew of Confusianism, Buddhism and Taoism) and her Judaism, she was educated in a Catholic school -- she "covers" a hell of a lot of culture. But apart from the interest of her unusual background, she has wry charm, humor, truthfulness, common sense and a warm, friendly presence in her work.

Memoirs To Savor
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-11
This book is a work to savor, rich with stories, lore, wisdom, e.g., the tale of Grand-Uncle Three and his coffin, the man who put rat's meat in egg noodle soup (ugh!), the description of Ms. Tham's bossy paternal grandmother, the author's coming to terms with the death of her younger sister (Jadegreen Plumblossom) and father, and so much more. I wasn't left at a distance by the fact that the memoirs are about a girl growing up (i.e., would there be something that I as a male could relate to there?) because Ms. Tham captured so much that is universal. If she or the book were more akin to the Princess Nohran or Fadzillah whom she described in it (Ms. Tham was, at one point when she lived in Malaysia, a tutor in English and Mathematics to princesses in a royal family), i.e., bubbling over with fascination regarding the merits of Revlon versus Elizabeth Arden skin-care cosmetics, that would have been a turn-off. But not the beautiful rendering of the past that deals with family, love, marriage, death, mythology, and art that is in evidence throughout the memoirs.

Asian-American
Leadership in the Crucible: The Korean War Battles of Twin Tunnels and Chipyong-Ni (Texas a & M University Military History Series)
Published in Hardcover by Texas A&M University Press (2003-05)
Author: Kenneth Earl Hamburger
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Average review score:

Excellent service
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-25
After reading David Halberstam's The Coldest Winter, I have started reading more history books about the
Korean War. This should be required reading for our military officers and NCOs.

A real gem
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-03
For those who seek examples on what constitutes good leadership (and bad for that matter) would do well to read Col. Hamburger's work. Set in Korea during the pivotal months of Jan-Feb 1951, he tells of the Battles of the Twin Tunnels and Chipyong-ni as fought by the 23rd Infantry Regiment and its attached French Battalion. He leaves nothing out, not only examining the command styles of Cols Freeman, Monclar and their subordinates,but goes into great detail among other things, the use of supporting arms, medical issues and what it was like for the men in the line. All of this in a highly readable, clear and even handed manner. Well done!

Asian-American
Leaving Deep Water: The Lives of Asian American Women at the Crossroads of Two Cultures
Published in Hardcover by Diane Pub Co (1998-10)
Author: Claire S. Chow
List price: $25.00
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Average review score:

living between two cultures
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-21
I always think that for those who were born in this country (USA) do not have any problems to "fit in" at schools or at work or at any communities. They were "American-born." Racial problems or discrimination issues should only be occurred to those who emigrated from other countries. Apparently it is not always the case. As the second generation and has an interracial-marriage, Ms Chow experienced unavoidable conflicts between her two cultures. In this well-written book, she not only told her own story, but also unveiled many other Asian-Americans women's stories. I enjoyed it!

An important book for Asian-American and Women's Studies
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1998-09-04
This is an imaginative, well-written, and important book. Claire Chow has explored a range of issues concerned with conflicts between Asian and American culture and social expectations. Topics included are gender relations and the tension between Asian-American expectations and those of the immigrant generation; mothers and daughters; fathers and daughters; choosing a partner; marriage and divorce; raising children; employment; ethnicity and identity; and a sense of belonging among other subjects. The writing is lucid, her family therapist training and experience applied in informative and insightful ways. Her own experience and her interviews are carefully integrated for maximum impact on her narrative presentation and her analysis. This book will be valuable in the classroom and for those Asian-American women and men who want a better perspective on how their experience is consistent with and differs from that of other immigrants, as well as from 1.5, second, and later generation Asian-Americans. I will use it in my class on the Asian American Experience and others will find it informative and suggestive.

Asian-American
Leaving the House of Ghosts: Cambodian Refugees in the American Midwest
Published in Paperback by McFarland & Company (2002-08-26)
Author: Sarah Streed
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My son
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-18
My son herd sarah talk at his school and requested that i would buy this book for him. He read it and loved it. He has taught me a whole bunch about the history of Cambodia and the reasons that it all happend and what happened. I give this book 5 stars because even though i haven't read it my son has told me more about this book than any other that he has read deserving me to come back to this site and make sure other people buy this book and read it.

MEEE!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-26
This is a great book. I personally know the author, and it took her over 13 years to write it. She interviewed many real cambodian refugees and did a lot of hard work. It is very informative.

Asian-American
The Life of Isamu Noguchi: Journey without Borders
Published in Hardcover by Princeton University Press (2004-08-09)
Author: Masayo Duus
List price: $29.95
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Average review score:

A Great Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-03
I really enjoyed reading this book .Not only was it informative but beautifully written .The book deals with Isamu Noguchi's life with insight and sensitivity .Definitely worth buying.

sculptor, heartlander, world traveler, aka
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-19
"Sam" Gilmour, heartlander, great sculptor, world traveler, free spirit, aka "Noguchi"--
The sadly neglected tale of a shy 13 year-old boy traveling alone to LaPorte, Indiana for early schooling "as a true American" and known there as "Sam" Gilmour, was later to become widely known as one of the world's greatest sculptors -- Isamu Noguchi (a future Jeopardy question?). A new biography "The Life of Isamu Noguchi: Journey Without Borders" includes revealing details and childhood snapshots for the first time from the archives of Lilly Library at Indiana University. This biography, only recently published in English, unfolds like a panoramic tapestry of life ... colorful, insightful, personal. It includes his stressful adaptations to cultural duality, personal relationships with notable companions, and his bonding with the idea of "mound builders" of native Americans.

After traveling alone across the ocean and the country, he began his new, Midwestern experience by hiking down the remote dirt road for the first time past the farms, fields, and woods to the Interlaken boarding school, feeling overwhelmed by the "vastness, the sweep, the panorama of that open Indiana countryside." Soon, when fateful WW I events abruptly closed the boarding school, he lived alone on the abandoned premises for a month "like Daniel Boone". Finally good fortune had him transferring to the public LaPorte High School and living with a locally prominent family in town, he graduated four years later in 1922. Typically, he had a newspaper route. Aspiring to be an "all-American boy", the yearbook included his illustrations and classmates elected him "Biggest Bull-Head."

And so goes the first 100 pages. The next 340 pages of this epic follow his footprints through the Sands of Time, continuing 'Sam's Splendid Adventure' to the peaks of artistic expression in dance theatre, architecture, and sculpture. Along the way, this "Hoosier" sojourns with many of the greatest artistic spirits this world has ever seen.

On a very personal note, I met with Noguchi a couple of times ('70s) in my New York work, and had once played a basketball game ('50s) at his Indiana high school (big deal there, then). Regrettably, I didn't realize at the time that our paths had previously crossed, albeit if only in space-time. Somewhere, sometime, "somewhat" dedicated individuals must necessarily put out a wake-up call to the Arts in Indiana patrons at colleges, museums, and libraries on this wholly unusual and neglected chapter of American cultural history at the turn of the 20th Century with its demographic changes of nation building immigration, new industrialization, and new urbanism. Fittingly, the Noguchi Foundation has an extensive curriculum guide available. His centennial birth date is November 17, 2004.

Asian-American
LIGHT SANG AS IT LEFT YOUR EYES: Our Autobiography
Published in Paperback by Marsh Hawk Press (2007-01)
Author: Eileen R. Tabios
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Average review score:

Skillfully crafted poetry and prose....
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-01
Eileen R. Tabios is one of the best avant garde and experimental poets alive today. Her poetic explorations -- scumbling, ekphrasis, Hay(na)Ku --demonstrate a zest for words and meanings as she shapes poems that reflect her world. Black sorrows, bright hopes, harsh injustices, a poisoned environment, new poetic forms, and boundless love share equal time on each skillfully crafted page published. In this latest book, Tabios proves that she has mastered prose equal to her exceptional poetry.

In April, 2006, Eileen Tabios' father died. Filamore B. Tabios, Sr. had fled the Philippines with his family when Ferdinand Marcos came to power. He was an old world father, patriarchal and strong-willed in his dealings with an equally strong-willed daughter. In this book, as she spends time in the hospital at her dying father's bedside, the boundaries and divisions between them soften. The journal she shares in this book is a remarkable psalm to life. Consider this excerpt from the opening poem -- "Sentences" -- to understand the poet's heart:

The same book you read to excavate me is a fiction I sculpted to soften
my marble core, as if -- and I still don't know -- words can save me from
myself.

The same poem you are feeling your way through is a thin, blue vein dug
out from beneath my flesh for the color of a sky breaking into scarlet to
set words afire.

Somehow, those dying days in April clarify the poet's vision and understanding. She makes sense out of her sorrow by identifying with Marcos' daughter, Imee. In "What Can a Daughter Say?", Eileen Tabios acts as surrogate for Imee Marcos and both daughters learn what their fathers were, and were not:

The palace of one's childhood
-- for even those who could afford
the bricks to obviate metaphor --
is usually constructed from memory.

Ms. Tabios and her peers have perfected the art of Hay(na)Ku, a poem comprised of six words and three lines. Tabios edits and writes, writes and edits as she struggles through the reality of losing her father to cancer:

The poem cannot
be pure.
Sound

never travels unimpeded
by anonymous
butterflies.

Her father`s dying does not soften Eileen Tabios` reflections on injustice. "April in Los Angeles" is a 120 verse contemplation on love, grief, horror, exhaustion and regret that zeroes in on the cost cutting cruelty practiced by modern hospitals. Tabios fans will discover that sorrow has neither blurred her outlook on world politics or injustice, nor smothered her passionate love of friends, family, and literary excellence. This autobiography in poetry and prose is typical Tabios -- intensely personal yet international in flavor -- with translations by and collaborations with her peers from other lands. Highly recommended.

Who Touches This Book Touches An Incredible Poet
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-19
The more I encounter Eileen Tabios' writings--(and I mean that word "encounter" exactly as I wrote it, for to read Eileen Tabios is encounter her, no more, no less)--the more I'm convinced that she's a force of nature instead of a mere scribbling mortal like the rest of us. I imagine Dr. Bucke must have felt the same way about Walt Whitman who time and again in his poems tells us that who touches his book touches him. (Of course his eventual encounter with the aging poet is a different matter.) Tabios manages to do the same thing with this book, and in fact even begins to talk in "we's" instead of "I's" toward the end of it. The big question is: how does she manage to pull this transfiguration off in a skeptical age when writing like this must be done with tongue firmly in cheek and a roll of the eyes to escape jeers and sneers? Well, first one must know exactly who one is to do it. Tabios is one of the most consistent personalities in contemporary women's poetry. We know almost all there is to know about her, and if we don't know it, a turn of the page or a click on one of her many website links will tell us! But isn't this just a dazzling show of--narcissism? Absolutely not. Her seemingly artless style of writing draws one in and by the end of whatever it is we are reading we feel as if we were sitting in the living room of a gracious friend leaning near to tell us the story she needs to share with us at that particular moment. Often the tone is like that of a letter from your sister--you feel almost embarrassingly close to the writer. She addresses you as a "peep" and her team of readers as "peeps"! (I turn to the beat-up, jaded face in the mirror and giggle. "You are a peep" I say, feeling completely rejuvenated, but still managing to stick my tongue out just the same.) Moreover, she refers to herself over and over as "Moi". Moi? So there is the sacred dichotomy in Tabios terms, or in other words, I and the Other. Yes, Tabios knows who she is--she is completely comfortable with her role as Other. But what exactly does that "Otherness" entail? First she is a Philippine-American writer and in her pages she displays the history, the culture, and the mind-set. Next she is a daughter who has lost her father, and we are allowed into the presence of the dead and given the opportunity to mourn with her, to over-hear her mother as she mummers to the body of the man she shared her life with, and to know the details of the mourning, the ritual and the burial. After that we move not only towards a revelation of the transfiguration of her father's spirit, but a joyful openness and acceptance that takes the form of a series of collaborations with various poets and artists, and this arms-wide embracing of other Others and placing them between the same covers and in the same bindings--well, this is where she becomes larger than her readers and her boundaries drift off the page and assume the receding horizons of the world wide net. What energy! What charm! And this doesn't even begin to address the many virtuoso forms she displays in her "warm" rather than "cool" experimentalism.

Asian-American
Living for Change: An Autobiography
Published in Hardcover by University of Minnesota Press (1998-03)
Author: Grace Lee Boggs
List price: $52.95
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Average review score:

An interesting take on racism in America
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-04
I was impressed to find this book at my public library. It is an important remembrance of some of the movements that were occurring during the 1940's through the 1990's. Lots of acronyms! Some of the history of the splits in the Party got tedious.

It was interesting to read about some of the options people had besides the Panthers, to hear the view of taking responsibilty, not only blaming the man for the situation. And to reaffirm the idea that a great shift in society needs to occur before we can have true equality.

NO JUSTICE, NO PEACE!

Amazing Grace
Helpful Votes: 39 out of 39 total.
Review Date: 1998-04-12

For anyone who has ever wanted to work for social change, this life story by a wise and vital woman is a guidebook. As the book's cover tells us, "Grace Lee Boggs is a first-generation Chinese American who has been a speaker, writer, and movement activist in the African- American community for fifty-five years." After earning her Ph.D. in philosophy at Bryn Mawr in June of 1940, Grace wanted to become an activist. She moved to Chicago in the fall of 1940 and began working with the South Side Tenants Organization--a group that had been set up by the Workers Party.

When distinguished "labor leader A. Phillip Randolph issued a call for blacks all over the country to march on Washington to demand jobs in the defense plants," more and more people began attending the Workers Party discussions in Chicago's Washington Park. Grace had been invited to participate in those discussions. She said, "The more I went out in the community and met people, the more inadequate I was beginning to feel." When Randolph's leadership of the March on Washington movement was successful and President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 8802, Grace realized "the power that the black community has within itself to change this country when it begins to move. As a result, I decided that what I wanted to do with the rest of my life was to become a movement activist in the black community." To Grace, "Joining the Workers Party seemed a good way to start," and that's what she did, in order to get the political education she felt she needed.

In the 1950s, Grace moved to Detroit where she worked on the Socialist Workers Party newsletter and met Jimmy Boggs, "A rank-and-file black Chrysler-Jefferson worker and community activist." Grace liked living in Detroit because it "felt like a 'Movement' city where radical history had been made and could be made again." She also liked working with Jimmy. Having worked closely with C. L. R. James, the intellectually powerful Socialist philosopher, Grace felt that her life had been "exciting but also extremely intellectual." She reasoned that she "needed to return to the concrete." Grace and Jimmy married in 1953 and began a life together that was rooted in the concrete reality of a major 20th-century industrialized city that had been abandoned by the large corporations that built it and by much of its white population.

As Ossie Davis says in his foreword to Grace's book, "Through these pages walk causes, gatherings, confrontations, movements, and the men and women who made them: workers and students and committees of the People...." Studs Terkel has called Grace's book "More than a deeply moving memoir...." He said, "...this is a book of revelation."

It is just that, for with passion and reason, Grace invites us to join her and Jimmy. She shows how they made "Detroit Summer" and "Gardening Angels" part of a new urban economic system, and she shows us how to interact multiculturally and multi-generationally. She doesn't merely talk about it--she does it and reports on its results. Grace Boggs educates us in her book and helps us see the possibilities of what we can do in our own cities.

Asian-American
Longfellow's Tattoos: Tourism, Collecting, And Japan
Published in Paperback by University of Washington Press (2004-09-30)
Author: Christine M. E. Guth
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An American in Edo
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-24
This is one of the most fascinating stories I have ever read. Politically correct academics have succeeded in erasing Longfellow from the American canon, replacing him and his contemporaries with names you've never heard and will never know how to pronounce. Perhaps this bit of exotica if not to say erotica will give life back to this former pillar of American culture. It is the son, not the sage of Cambridge whom Professor Guth has chosen as her subject. But what a character he is. Longfellow Jr. had very little going for himself besides boredom and a nearly limitless bank account, so he went on an extended grand tour of the Orient, setting himself up in a Japanese harem, stocked like a koi pond which nubile Japanese maidens. Besides an addiction to Asian flesh, young Longfellow seems to have keyed into that great American pastime known as shopping with the result that he brought a warehouse full of souvenires back to fill Boston's museums and the mansions of his father's aristocratic friends. Any way you look at it, this story has legs. It's a miracle Hollywood hasn't grabbed hold of it. Stay tuned.

A cultural expose of Japan in the 19th century
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-07
Charles Longfellow was the son of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Charles visited Japan in the 1870s intending a brief visit, and stayed for two years, returning to Boston with photos and elaborate tattoos he had 'collected' on his body. But Christine M.E. Guth's Longfellow's Tattoos: Tourism, Collecting, And Japan is not so much a survey of collectible items nor even tattoo history, as a cultural expose of Japan in the 19th century travel world. Chapters survey the state and nature of Japanese culture in the world of the times, using art and curios as a focal point.

Asian-American
Losing Face & Finding Grace: 12 Bible Studies for Asian-Americans
Published in Paperback by InterVarsity Press (1997-01)
Author: Tom Lin
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Average review score:

Wonderful Bible Study Guide For Asian Americans
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-14
I saw this book while I was doing inner city missions during Summer 2000. Later that year, I bought a copy of it for myself. It is perhaps the best Bible Study guide for Asian Americans I've ever found.
This book has 12 Bible studies that are designed for Asian Americans who struggle with their cross-cultural identity. Some of the topics covered are grace, the Asian work ethic, filael piety, marriage, and other things that Asian Americans go through. It also provides a Biblical framework, so that when Asians ask, "How do I overcome this?", they have a ready reference. This Bible study guide is also very helpful for those Asians who don't feel totally Asian nor totally American, either (this is what Asians commonly refer to as "Bamboo").
Incidently, I'm not Asian. I'm a Caucasian Pastor out of Chicago who God has called to worship with and minister to Asian Americans, mostly ages 18-30. Anyone out there who has full time contact with Asians like I do should go through all of the 12 Bible studies in this book. It will better equip you for ministering to and worshiping with Asian Americans. I'm sure it will be a blessing to you as it has been to me.
I'd like to personally thank Tom Lin for seeing the vision to do this and also to InterVarsity Press for putting it out. Praise God!

Excellent Bible study for Asian Americans
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-08
If you haven't seen any of my other book reviews, let me first tell you about myself. I'm a white guy who worships with, pastors, and mentors Asian Americans, mostly 18-30. I was first called by God to be a cross cultural pastor to Asian Americans back in 1996. I've read many cross cultural books that have helped me, this being one of them.
As for this book, I'd call this a must read for anyone who is Asian American, from the 1.5's, 2nd generation, and beyond. You'll understand so much more about yourself, your ethnic heritage, and your Asian culture in light of the Bible. This Bible study guide addresses such issues as grace, the Asian work ethic, God's will vs. Parent's will, and other simular topics that Asian American Christians struggle with.
So many Asian-Americans struggle with their cross-cultrual identity while living here in America. While this book may not be the "end all" for all Asian American Christians and their struggles, this will certainly get the ball rolling in terms of the healing process. It will also help them come to terms with their cross cultural identity by showing what the Bible says and what they should live out.
In short, this book opened my eyes to many of the struggles that Asian American Christians go through. Again, I'm not Asian, nor do I pretend to be. However, this book has made me better prepared for the ministry that God has called me to.

Asian-American
Mahatma Gandhi
Published in Paperback by Columbia University Press (2000-10-15)
Author: Dennis Dalton
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Average review score:

The POWER of the Truth Force
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-06
I don't care to duplicate the academic praise seen in the above reviews. But I can tell you simply that Dennis Dalton was my professor in a class on Non-Violence at Columbia Univ. and it changed my life. At a period of time when I was an atheist, believing that all religion was just a set of rules to control people, D. Dalton demonstrated through the example of Ghandi that the Love and Truth force can be a powerful vehicle for change. This completely changed my view point from victim to activist. One could actually have spirituality from within, instead of imposed upon him or her from without. A tool, not a punishment. The 'truth' one has seems to be irrelevant; it is one's passion and belief and willingness to stand behind that Truth that triumphs. If it is True in the archetypal sense, others will join (not follow) you. And by direct action at the heart level, you can touch and change nations. This is not about passive resistance; this is about direct non-violent confrontation. It is about appealing to the best, the highest nature, of that which you confront. He showed me that one can change the world with one's heart; that truth can win. And now I just wait for Dennis to write the definative book on Emma Goldman... Truly a great teacher and initiator of the inner spark of one's own truth force. And with Ghandi as his guiding archetype, this book should be on the reading list of every activist.

Concise, thoughtful analysis of Gandhi's ideas.
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-01
What a brilliant analysis of Gandhi's philosophy! This is an insightful collection of essays that illuminates the essential relationship between Gandhi's theory of non-violence and his practice of the same. Dennis Dalton uses two powerful examples: the Salt March of 1930 and the fast to end Partition-related violence in 1947. There is a fascinating conclusion between Gandhi's ideas and those of Martin Luther King and Malcolm X, illustrating the relevance of Gandhi's thought to present day issues.


Books-Under-Review-->Society-->Ethnicity-->Asian-->Asian-American-->45
Related Subjects: Hmong American Vietnamese American Taiwanese American Indonesian American Thai American Burmese American Malaysian American Cambodian American Organizations Arts and Culture
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