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by Ellen Lee, AARP, May 18, 2021. Read the full article here.

The story of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders is not a singular one. Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders hail from more than 20 countries, reflecting a multitude of languages, traditions, cultures — and narratives.

Collectively they represent the fastest growing racial group in the United States, according to the Pew Research Center, and they have become a creative force of notable fiction, poetry, memoir and nonfiction. Charles Yu’s Interior Chinatown won the National Book Award for fiction and Don Mee Choi’s DMZ Colony won the National Book Award for poetry last year, for instance, while Viet Thanh Nguyen’s The Sympathizers received a Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 2016 and Jhumpa Lahiri’s The Lowland was short-listed for the 2013 Man Booker Prize.

To celebrate Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, we’ve highlighted seven captivating and diverse books by AAPI authors. They were curated from a long list of recommendations from May-lee Chai, a creative writing professor at San Francisco State University and author of the memoir Hapa Girl; Marie Myung-Ok Lee, a writer in residence at Columbia University and author of the forthcoming novel The Evening Hero; Colleen Lye, an English professor at UC Berkeley; and Maw Shein Win, a poet and author of Storage Unit for the Spirit House.

Minor Feelings: An Asian American Reckoning

By Cathy Park Hong

A collection of sharp, powerful, personal essays, Minor Feelings takes a hard look at poet Cathy Park Hong’s “minor feelings” about race, identity and the world at large — all of which are not “minor” at all. Published last year, just as COVID-19 began to spark anti-Asian rhetoric, Hong’s writing articulates the many conflicting emotions felt by Asian Americans, particularly in this time of heightened awareness of race and inequity. “It’s such an important book, especially now,” says Win. Lee calls Minor Feelings a “book that resonates and also helps us understand the moment we are in.”

PENGUIN RANDOM HOUSE

Searching for Sylvie Lee

By Jean Kwok

When her older sister disappears during a trip to the Netherlands, Amy Lee, the baby of the family, sets out to find her in this novel. Retracing her sister’s steps, Lee uncovers one secret after another. Kwok, whose previous novels include Girl in Translation, borrows from her own personal life: her older brother went missing while flying a twin-engine airplane in 2009 (his body was found in the wreckage a week later). Searching for Sylvie Lee is “a mystery, romance, and also a story about family secrets, immigration and the enduring bonds between siblings,” Marie Myung-Ok Lee says.

WILLIAM MORROW PAPERBACKS

The Burden of Being Burmese

By ko ko thett

Ko ko thett calls himself “a poet by choice and a Burmese by chance.” His book of poetry is considered the first major single-volume collection to appear in English by a contemporary Burmese poet, and it explores identity, culture and Burmese politics. Particularly in light of the recent coup in Myanmar, it is a must-read, Win says. Thett, a translator, also edited Bones Will Crow, an award-winning anthology of contemporary Burmese poetry.

ZEPHYR PRESS

The Color of Success: Asian Americans and the Origins of the Model Minority

By Ellen Wu

Recommended by Lye, The Color of Success addresses the still-pervasive and harmful myth of Asian Americans as a “model minority.” Ellen Wu, a history professor at Indiana University in Bloomington, shows us through this work of nonfiction how Asian Americans were considered the “yellow peril” during the 19th century, and how their portrayal shifted over time to the “model minority.” The stereotype became a way to wedge Asian Americans into the discourse between white and Black Americans, minimizing the impact of racism. And in mischaracterizing AAPIs as one big monolith, it hides disparities within the AAPI community, including high levels of poverty.

PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS

The Latehomecomer: A Hmong Family Memoir

By Kao Kalia Yang

Chai describes Kao Kalia Yang’s The Latehomecomer as a “remarkable memoir of her Hmong refugee family’s journey to Minnesota.” Yang, who is also the author of the picture books A Map Into the World and The Most Beautiful Things, recounts her family’s escape from Laos to Thailand following the Vietnam War. Poetic and evocative, her memoir also takes us to her childhood in Minnesota, depicting her family’s struggles to learn a new language and acclimate to life in the United States.

COFFEE HOUSE PRESS


Sharks in the Time of Saviors

By Kawai Strong Washburn

When 7-year-old Noa falls into the Pacific Ocean, sharks surround him and keep him from drowning — an act that becomes legendary, leads to Noa’s new healing abilities and sparks more attention than his family would like. Named one of former President Obama’s favorite reads last year, Sharks in the Time of Saviors is Kawai Strong Washburn’s debut novel — which Chai praises as “gripping” — and blends Hawaiian mythology with the contemporary story of millennials finding their place in life.

PICADOR PAPER

A House Is a Body: Stories

By Shruti Swamy

A House Is a Body is a collection of “innovative short stories about the South Asian diaspora,” says Chai. Shruti Swamy’s 12 stories delve into major life transitions, such as motherhood and loss, and take place both in India and the United States. In one, a woman marries a childhood friend, only for him to leave her. In another, a mother cares for — and doesn’t care for — her ailing daughter. Swamy’s novel The Archer debuts this fall.