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Book Review: The Year of the Dog by Grace Lin

New book a "must-read" for an underserved age group among Asian-American youth

By Frances Kai-Hwa Wang, IMDiversity.com Asian American Village contributing editor

 

 

“How come Chinese people are never important?” I asked Melody.

“What do you mean?” she said. “We’re important.”

“No, we’re not,” I said. “You never see a Chinese person in the movies or in a play or in a book. No one Chinese is important.”

“There are Chinese movie stars,” Melody said, “and the woman that does the news is Chinese.”

“Not a lot, though,” I said. “And there are none in books. Whenever we do a school play, it’s always from books and none of the characters are Chinese. We did Cinderella, Peter Pan, Alice in Wonderland—nobody in books is Chinese.”

“There must be,” Melody said. “Just because the school hasn’t done a play about a Chinese person doesn’t mean there aren’t any.”

Melody and I went to the library and asked for a Chinese book. We looked at the book The Seven Chinese Brothers.

“See,” Melody said, “Chinese people.”

“Those aren’t real Chinese people, though,” I said. “Your brother doesn’t have a ponytail.”

--from The Year of the Dog by Grace Lin, 2006 (Little, Brown, and Co., New York)

 

One of my first Asian American “Ah ha!” moments came when reading Maxine Hong Kingston’s Woman Warrior—the scene where she wonders why people think that Chinese American girls are nice and quiet, when Chinese women are so bossy and loud. She describes Cantonese women eating and gesturing and talking loudly in very guttural Cantonese in restaurants. Suddenly something clicked in my head. I had also always struggled to live up to the nice and quiet Chinese girl image, while my six aunties and six great aunties are certainly nothing if not bossy and loud, every last one of them bossier and louder than the next (and we don’t even speak Cantonese). No delicate cherry blossom Madame Butterfly types here. Without a friend or a book to note the obvious, however, I had completely missed that contradiction that was right in front of me my whole life.

Grace Lin’s debut novel, The Year of the Dog, part memoir part fiction, is another book full of these “Ah ha!” moments that both our children and we will appreciate. The book is written for an elementary to middle school audience, but the adventures and questions of these plucky second-grade characters will resonate with us all. Author Grace Lin writes that this is the book she wished she had had when she was growing up. I wish I had had it, too.


Available @ Amazon


The Year of the Dog
 

These days there are more and more APA picture books, historical APA books, and APA middle/high school coming-of-age novels on the market, but I think there is a still a real paucity of books for those children who can already read by themselves (about second to sixth grades) but are not quite ready to learn about the harsh realities of racism, bullying, popularity, and dating. (There is Lensey Namioka’s series of books about the irrepressible Yang family learning to adjust to life in America, Lawrence Yep’s The Imp that Ate my Homework and Chinatown Mysteries series, and Lisa Yee’s Millicent Min Girl Genius.) This is the perfect book for that age group. (My first, fourth, and sixth graders all highly recommend it, and they never enjoy the same books.)

In The Year of the Dog, many identity issues are handled with humor, grace and ease. The main character is not rebellious or traumatized or tortured (except by her older sister), but she does wonder aloud about a lot about things. She tries to make sense of situations that we have all been through—showing our children that they are not the only one—like being mistaken for the one other Chinese girl in school, deciphering seemingly crazy family customs (and family members), being forced to go to Chinese family camp to make Chinese friends, trying to figure out the difference between being Chinese and Taiwanese, and trying to understand why there are no Chinese American characters in books or plays.

Parents will appreciate that the mother is written with wisdom and calm—meaning not crazy—full of stories that show that even though she grew up in Taiwan, she understands her child’s experience in America. The father is funny and written with good humor. Both parents are smart, easy-going, English-speaking, middle-class professionals.

The story also features two—count them, TWO!—Chinese-American protagonists and their families, both of which are very different—again showing our children that not all Chinese Americans are alike—one child speaks Chinese and the other does not; one mother can cook and the other cannot; one child is in the orchestra and one child is in the school play. One child is slightly “more Chinese” than the other, but they learn and figure things out together.

The book is also really laugh-out-loud funny! The writing is easy and colorful and obviously written by an artist: “After the book project was over, the days disappeared like dumplings on a plate. The sun shone with the yellow of summer and the wind blew a breeze that felt like it came from an oven.” The pages are also punctuated with Grace Lin’s delightful line drawings…including instructions on “How to Draw a Dog.”

Everyone simply must read this book!

 

About the Author

 (from www.gracelin.com)

Grace Lin grew up in Upstate New York with her parents and two sisters. While the other sisters became scientists, Grace became an artist. Surprisingly enough, being an artist was not Grace’s first choice. She first dreamed of being a champion ice skater, and drew many pictures of herself twirling and dancing on the ice. Unfortunately, Grace had neither the talent nor coordination to make it to skating stardom. However, the pictures she drew of herself held much promise and quickly became Grace’s career focus. After attending the Rhode Island School of Design, Grace quickly set out to achieve her dream of creating children’s books.

Her first book, THE UGLY VEGETABLES, was published in 1999 and was quickly heralded. As well as being an American Booksellers Association’s “Pick of the List” and a Bank’s Street College Best Books of the Year, THE UGLY VEGETABLES was nominated for the California Young Reader Children’s Choice Award and named a Growing Good Kids Book Award CLASSIC.

Grace followed that success with the publication of over a dozen more books, including DIM SUM FOR EVERYONE!, FORTUNE COOKIE FORTUNES, and OLVINA FLIES. Her book ROBERT’S SNOW became the inspiration for the cancer fighting fundraiser, Robert’s Snow: For Cancer’s Cure (www.robertssnow.com) and was featured on NBC’s Today Show.

Grace lives in Somerville, MA with her husband Robert Mercer. Please visit her website: www.gracelin.com for more info.  Her companion essay, "Don’t Judge a Book by its Character (even if it is Chinese): Why I Wrote the Year of the Dog," can be downloaded in PDF format (requires Adobe Reader)

Grace Lin. Photo Credit: Morgan Pace

 

 

Frances Kai-Hwa Wang

Frances Kai-Hwa Wang is a second-generation Chinese American from California who now divides her time between Michigan and the Big Island of Hawaii. She is currently an acting editor for IMDiversity.com's Asian-American Village, where she writes most frequently on culture, family, arts, and lifestyles topics. Her articles have appeared in Pacific Citizen, Asian Reader, Nikkei West, Sampan, Mavin, Eurasian Nation, and various Families with Children from China publications. She has also worked in anthropology and international development in Nepal, and in nonprofits and small business start-ups in the US. She is also the Outreach Coordinator of the Ann Arbor Chinese Center of Michigan and a much sought public speaker. She has four children. She can be reached at fkwang@aol.com.

IMDiversity.com is committed to presenting diverse points of view. However, the viewpoint expressed in this article is the opinion of the author and is not necessarily the viewpoint of the owners or employees at IMD.

 

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