Set in Sewanee, Tennessee in 1955, the foreign student of the title is
Chang Ahn fleeing from recurring nightmares of his life in Korea during the war.
He meets Sewanee resident, Katherine Monroe--definitely not a Southern
belle--who lives alone in her family's former summer home. Katherine is
isolated from the community because of her troubled past, and she struggles with
its effects and a strange but growing affinity to Chang. Their unlikely
friendship becomes a mutual attraction, but they will have to confront their
painful memories before they can embrace the future.
Susan Choi has given us an excellent plot with description that immerses
the reader in the lives of her characters and the places they inhabit. Chang's
Korean background and the politics in wartime Korea provide an unusual
dimension. As their past lives are slowly revealed, Katherine and Chang find
healing and mutual understanding.
Read-alikes:
Amy Tan
Chang-rae
Lee
Steven Lo Grace O'Connor - West
Islip Public Library Endo,Susaku.
Scandal An aging writer and a
professed Christian realizes that there are elements in his personality
heretofore suppressed and he must deal with this shadow side of his nature. We
follow his thought processes from complete denial, the suspicion that he has a
double, to the realization that, if not physically responsible for the acts of
sexual perversion described in his forays into the underbelly of the city, in
his heart and mind he has committed them. One is never sure whether he is the
doer or the observer and to the author the difference appears meaningless. The
reader realizes early on that the author is not writing a story about an aging
Japanese writer but attempting to express a universal truth about human nature.
A disturbing book presenting disturbing ideas but well-written and worth
reading. Rhea Pollock -
Brentwood Public Library
Hwang,Caroline. In Full Bloom
Ginger Lee is a fashion assistant at
A la
Mode magazine. Her life is complicated when her mother appears at her New
York City apartment determined to find her a proper Korean husband. Various
gentlemen callers are tossed in--including the son of an old friend, who just
happens to be engaged. The cast of characters includes the fiancee of said
son, Ginger's boss and former roommate, other employees of A la Mode magazine-
-some engaged in various struggles for promotion and more recognition. The
heroine jumps on this struggle as a possibility to advance herself and show
her mother the importance of a career that leaves no room for a husband.
Ginger is a likeable young woman and readers will enjoy many engaging moments
and arch humor. Ms. Hwang shows promise.
Read-a-likes:
Comfort Woman by Nora Okja Keller
Emotionally Weird by Kate Atkinson
Glass Lake by Maeve Binchey
Native Speaker by Shang-rae Lee
The Peppered Moth by Margaret Drabble
Shopaholic Ties the Knot by Sophie Kinsella
A Step From Heaven by An Na
The Works of Amy Tan Marie T. Horney - Cold Spring Harbor Library Ishiguro, Kazuo. An Artist of the Floating World
Kazuo Ishiguro uses the writing technique of memory to unfold the story of Masuji Ono's life in post and pre-World War II Japan. Ono, the elderly narrator
of the story, was once an artist of the "floating world," a pleasure-filled
period of geishas, gardens and teahouses. The onus for Ono's reflection on his
past is his youngest daughter's engagement, which involves an investigation into
his family's background. Ono, though once well respected for his teachings and
artistic propaganda for imperialistic Japan, fears that he has no place in
modern Japan and has become a detriment to his family. The reader may begin to
question the validity of Ono's memories and wonder how much Ono was really
involved in the war effort, based on the reactions of his family and former
colleagues. This story would appeal to readers of historical and multi-cultural
fiction. Ilana Beckerman - West Babylon Public Library Jin, Ha. Waiting Lin, an army physician in Communist China, is forced by his
parents to marry Shuyu. She will remain in the country to care for them in
their old age. Lin falls in love with a nurse, Manna, who he sees everyday
in the city hospital where he works. He waits eighteen years to divorce
Shuyu and marry Manna, thus the title Waiting. While this is a story of a
love triangle, it also paints a powerful picture of life under communism.
Waiting would be a good choice for a book discussion. Readers who liked
Memoirs of a Geisha would also enjoy it. Karen Jaffe - Comsewogue Public Library
Mun-Yol,Yi. The Poet First published in Korean as
Shiin in 1992, and in English translation in 1995,
The Poet is a work by South Korea's leading writer. Yi-Mun-Yol has published
more than 300 books; so far, only The Poet and Our Twisted Hero have been
translated into English. The novel is a fictionalized account of the life of an
actual historical figure named Kim Pyong-yon who lived from 1807-1863. Kim
Pyong-yon, whose pen name was Kim Sakkat for the huge paper hat he adopted, is
acknowledged to be one of Korea's finest poets.
Kim's entire family was disgraced after his grandfather, an aristocratic
general, is executed for siding with rebel forces. They are plunged into the
rigidly stratified life of ordinary Korean society and, eventually, Kim chooses
to live the life of a wandering scholar-poet, a life that is described in this
beautifully written book.
The Poet can be recommended for its portrait of 19th century Korean society.
Poetry lovers will admire Yi-Mun-yol's depiction of the poetic process. It is a
deceptively simple book which will reward the reader with these tastes.
Suzanne McGuire - Commack Public Library
Nguyen, Kien. The Unwanted: a Memoir
The Unwanted is a cathartic memoir that reads like a novel. A life which is a
testament to survival, Kien and his family are left in Saigon's political chaos
when the last helicopter departs.
Kien and his brother, prior to the fall of Saigon, live an idyllic though
isolated existence within the walls of his family's compound, a world his mother
creates because Kien is Amerasian. (She inherited money from an American
soldier who may have been Kien's father.) It is not until the fall of Saigon
that Kien realizes there is extreme poverty right outside the compound wall.
Due to their sudden reversal of fortune, Kien is transformed from a spoiled,
sheltered boy to a self sufficient survivor.
His mother is at once totally self-absorbed and then manically concerned with
the children's safety. Kien's grandparents provide the only constancy in their
lives. In a recent interview Kien fondly remembers his grandfather as a gifted
storyteller
Kien's story is simply told and all the more emotionally jarring as we learn of
the horrors of war, imprisonment and sexual abuse, through a child's eyes.
READ-A-LIKES
Fiction
The Gangster We Are All Looking For by Thi Diem Thuy Le
Land of Smiles by T.C. Huo
Pushed to Shore by Kate Gadbow
Saviors by Paul Eggers
NONFICTION
When Heaven and Earth Changed Places: A Vietnamese Woman's Journey from War to
Peace by Lehy Hayslip Peggy McCarthy - Smithtown Public Library
Oe,Kenzaburo. Nip the buds, shoot the kids
Nip the buds, shoot the kids, is a good example of the qualities that
distinguish Oe's writing: his anger (particularly about the wrong-mindedness of
war), his humanism, his merging of myth and realism, and an extraordinary poetic
style that comes through even in translation, this seeming to be a pretty good
translation. A vast range of influences can be discerned, from Mark Twain
(whose
books he read as a child) and William Golding (Lord of the Flies is certainly
evoked) to Norman Mailer and Albert Camus. Oe studied French literature and its
influence on him is clear. In this book, the nameless village is as symbolic as
Camus' Oran or Golding's desert island. There are only a handful of proper
names
in the book and there is virtually no identifiable reference to any actual time
or
place. It occupies a generalized realm of the mythic imagination and burns with
the agony of an existential hero in a time and place where any deviancy meets
with
savage retribution. Betrayed even by his comrades at the end and bereft of all
human accommodation, with the idyll of freedom ended by the tragic resurgence of
death which snatches away his lover and his brother, the narrator runs blindly
off
into the dark void. There is much for discussion groups here, such as the
meaning of life, Western influences on writers of other cultures, translation of
books in other languages; and the book would appeal to those who relate to works
like Lord of the Flies and the works of authors like Sartre and Camus, from
teenagers to adults. Since the book contains some grittily realistic details,
it
should not be recommended to the squeamish.
Arlene Leventhal - Half Hollow Hills
Community Library Shigekuni, Julie. Invisible
Gardens Lily Soto, a thirty five year old Japanese American women has the
perfect life. She's a college professor married to a successful
pathologist, has two beautiful children, and a new home yet somehow she is
discontent. Her midlife crisis results in an affair with a colleague which
nearly destroys her family. Luckily, at the end, she approaches her life
with greater insight.
Fans of Elizabeth Berg, Cathleen Schine and Ruth Ozeki might enjoy
this novel. This might also appeal to children of interred Japanese during
World War II as well as children of Holocaust survivors.
Karen Jaffe - Comsewogue Public Library
Yoshikawa, Mako.
One Hundred and One Ways This novel centers on Kiki Takehashi, a student in New York
City, of Japanese descent. She is awaiting the arrival of
her grandmother (Obaasma), a former geisha, to visit for the
United States and meet her granddaughter for the first time.
Kiki is close to her divorced mother, who lives in the
family home in New Jersey, but leads an independent life in
NYC, going to school.
This visit becomes the outward focus of Kiki's life, as
she tries to understand her recent engagement to Eric, a
Jewish lawyer, and her true-love's, Philip, sudden death
in an avalanche over 18 months ago. Philip's ghost still
haunts her, silently, as she lives her daily life.
The author interweaves the search for true, meaningful,
lasting love as seen through the lives of a geisha, her
daughter, and her granddaughter. The author uses symbols
(i.e., moths, balloons) to express the emotional state
certain characters. There are gratuitous sex scenes, and
one very disturbing episode of self-mutilation, that can be
difficult to appreciate.
Read Alikes:
Once Removed by Mako Yoshikawa
The Laws of Evening By Mary Yukari Waters
Memoirs of a Geisha by Arthur S. Golden Janet Mancuso-Rucker,
Babylon Public Library Yoshimoto,
Banana. Kitchen Kitchen is a novella with a bonus short story included titled
Moonlight Shadow.
Both stories are told from the perspective of a young Japanese woman making the
transition from girl to young woman in contemporary Japan. Each story deals with
the themes of family relationships, love, tragedy and death. Yoshimoto has
written a moving book filled with unique characters and themes. Rosalie Toja - Brentwood Public Library
Asian Authors Part 2
Choi,Susan. The Foreign Student
