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Shawn Wong

Author of American Knees

9+ Works 518 Members 4 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Shawn Hsu Wong

Image credit: By Nancy Wong - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=26565927

Works by Shawn Wong

Associated Works

Charlie Chan Is Dead: An Anthology of Contemporary Asian American Fiction (1993) — Contributor — 169 copies, 3 reviews
Growing up Asian American: An Anthology (1993) — Contributor — 112 copies, 2 reviews
On a Bed of Rice (1995) — Contributor — 80 copies
Breaking Silence: An Anthology of Contemporary Asian-American Poets (1983) — Contributor — 30 copies, 1 review
A Few Thousand Words About Love (1998) — Contributor — 28 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
male

Members

Reviews

4 reviews
I initially read this anthology in college; I've picked it up several times since then for a revisit. Perhaps the first most important thing to know about it is the breadth of material. The Big Aiiieeeee contains translated poetry, sketchwork, fiction, autobiography/memoir and sociological materials, as well as commentary to help contextualize each piece. Some people may enjoy that diversity of sources - I do, very much, although I may not enjoy all pieces the same; but if you're looking for show more something like a short story collection, this is not your book.

The book takes on the challenge of beginning to present some of the history of Chinese and Japanese Americans and to articulate some of the contours of possible experiences for persons of those groups. Some of the material is now a bit out of date, but still presents a compelling snapshot of perspectives at the time the book was published. The diversity of sources, writers, and perspectives provides a rounded and complex picture - perhaps the best thing that readers can take away from it is that there is no one, single, definitive experience, and two persons with similarly non-white appearances and backgrounds can have markedly different feelings and experiences of being an American. There are many cautionary tales - experiences we should feel badly about - and can learn from, going forward.

This book is a great way to become acquainted with a diversity of source material, and good launching pad for further reading. It's probably not great for someone who wants a cohesive portrait or argument or an "easy read."
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I read this book for asian-am
Lit in college. It was a good course with a great instructor who is also an author. He happened to be friends with Shawn and brought him to class one day. After all of the history and more "serious" six novels that we had to read, this one was much lighter. Shawn told us that he wrote this book basically for his sister(s)(?) who wanted a sexy beach book.
This is a beautifully written book. He has a new one (American Knees) that I can't wait to read.
Asian Americans as contemporary people - funny, interesting and a very good read.

Awards

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Associated Authors

Lawson Fusao Inada Contributor, Editor
Jeffery Paul Chan Contributor, Editor
Frank Chin Contributor
Louis Chu Contributor
Hisaye Yamamoto Contributor
Toshio Mori Contributor
Wakako Yamauchi Contributor
John Okada Contributor
Momoko Iko Contributor
Carlos Bulosan Contributor
Diana Chang Contributor
Oscar Penaranda Contributor
Sam Tagatac Contributor
Wallace Lin Contributor
Hiroshi Kashiwagi Contributor
Minoru Yasui Contributor
Lonny Kaneko Contributor
Wing Tek Lum Contributor
Larry Tajiri Contributor
Peter T. Suzuki Contributor
Masaharu Hane Contributor
Monica Sone Contributor
Sui Sin Far Contributor
Kazuo Miyamoto Contributor
Marlon K. Hom Contributor
Michi Weglyn Contributor
Milton Murayama Contributor
David Wong Louie Contributor
Taro Yashima Contributor
Joy Kogawa Contributor
Raymond Federman Contributor
Toni Cade Bambara Contributor
Chester Himes Contributor
Tara Fickle Foreword

Statistics

Works
9
Also by
8
Members
518
Popularity
#47,944
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
4
ISBNs
25

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