All posts filed under: Books on Books

Six Novels with Summer as a Backdrop

The soothing crash of waves colliding against the shore. Birds chirping under a shady canopy of trees. The quiet conversations of strangers sharing the patio of your favorite café. Whatever soundtrack you prefer as you enjoy your beloved books over the next few months, my only recommendation is to keep the summer vibes going.  Whether you’re searching for heartbreak, romance, drama, or full-bodied laughs, these masterful works of fiction are perfect for staying in season while being transported through time and space. Some classics, some classics to be – all of these are worth a spot in your beach bag as you battle the heat and take a much-needed vacation between the pages of one of these summer must-reads. Summer is often my season of reflection. It’s my in-between. As an educator, summer is when I unwind, reset, spend my days outdoors, and taste the saltiness of the sea. It’s when I stack my to-be-read list with authors across the diaspora and consume as much literature as I can. Whatever summer is to you, I …

A Mirror of Memories

Julia Lee’s Biting the Hand: Growing Up Asian in a Black and White America is my story, too. For the past several years, what has fueled me (or has been slowly burning me up, I can’t tell anymore) is the growing rage and fury that’s been inside me like a fireball. I often have visualized myself as Ryu from the 1980s video game, Street Fighter, who is ready to unleash his fireball attack. My problem is that I don’t know where, at what, or at whom I should unleash it. When I picked up Julia Lee’s memoir, Biting the Hand: Growing Up Asian in Black and White America, I immediately recognized that rage she kicks off with. For me, it’s rage about the patriarchy, anti-Asian hate, racism (both internalized and external), genocide, past self-hatred, and microaggressions that happen multiple times every day, the “model minority” myth, Japanese incarceration in World War II, the inordinate number of incarcerated Black and Brown men and women in the U.S., the school to prison pipeline – the list goes …