Tuesday, January 2, 2024

Book Blog #326: American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang

 

Title: American Born Chinese

Author: Gene Luen Yang

# of Pages: 233 (paperback)

Genre: YA, Graphic Novel

Rating: ★★★★☆

Synopsis: All Jin Wang wants is to fit in. When his family moves to a new neighborhood, he suddenly finds that he's the only Chinese American student at his school. Jocks and bullies pick on him constantly, and he has hardly any friends. Then, to make matters worse, he falls in love with an all-American girl... Born to rule over all the monkeys in the world, the story of the Monkey King is one of the oldest and greatest Chinese fables. Adored by his subjects, master of the arts of kung-fu, he is the most powerful monkey on earth. But the Monkey King doesn't want to be a monkey. He wants to be hailed as a god... Chin-Kee is the ultimate negative Chinese stereotype, and he's ruining his cousin Danny's life. Danny's a popular kid at school, but every year Chin-Kee comes to visit, and every year Danny has to transfer to a new school to escape the shame. This year, though, things quickly go from bad to worse...

Review: I started this book for the easy read (since it's a graphic novel), and I can't say there would be anything that would have prepared what was in store. This is not your cut and dry story of the Chinese American experience - Yang expertly uses three stories running in parallel to depict what it's like to not fit in and trying to be someone else for the sake of fitting in. 

I have actually seen images from this book a long time ago (specifically of Chin-Kee). I didn't make that they were from this book (which was recently made into a Disney+ series) until I started reading. This only added to my intrigue on where this book was going to go - why was a Chinese American author creating a strongly negatively stereotyped character?

Usually I don't like POV switching, and this book switches between the three stories from Jin's, Danny's, and Chin-Kee's POV. That being said, American Born Chinese is a great example of POV switching that is actually necessary for the story rather than used as a crutch for amateur writers. 

For a book aimed at younger audiences and the style/colors of the art leaning childish, it was surprising how crude parts of it were (think fart humor and of course the extreme depiction of Chin-Kee went from racist to him being a flat out terrible human being). I didn't mind it, and the immature humor did a good job to lighten the tone of the story.

It's a pretty quick entertaining read, so I would recommend it!

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