American-Born Chinese
By Gene Luen Yang
Review by Stella Farris
Three seemingly unrelated stories blend into a memorable tale of growing up Chinese American. The book begins with the ancient fable of the Monkey King, the proud leader of the monkeys. He is punished for entering the god's dinner party by being buried under a mountain for five hundred years. Second in the story of Jin Wang, the son of immigrants struggling to retain his Chinese identity while longing to be more Americanized. The fnial story is that of Cousin Chin-Kee, an amalgamation of the worst Chinese stereotypes. Chin-Kee yearly visits his all-American cousin Danny, causing so much embarrassment that Danny must chage schools. The final chapter unifies the three tales into one version of what it means to be American-born Chinese.
Review from School Library Journal
Yang, Gene Luen. American- Born Chinese. New York: Roaring Brook Press, 2006.
Friday, June 22, 2007
Lanier Readers
Monitors please read one book per six weeks and write a review that will be posted on this blog. Write a book review that includes a summary of the story, "sells" the book to blog readers, and rates the book's overall quality.
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