American Born Chinese

Paperback, 240 pages

English language

Published Sept. 5, 2006 by First Second.

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (36 reviews)

Alternates three interrelated stories about the problems of young Chinese Americans trying to participate in the popular culture. Presented in comic book format.

8 editions

An interesting story about relationships, even between an Asian-American teen and a Monkey King.

3 stars

An interesting story that starts off being told in three separate parts before coming together at the end in a tale of being who you should be and on having friendships with others.

In one tale, Jin Wang is one of a few Asian-Americans in a school and gets picked on by other non-Asian students, as well as facing racist stereotypes. He eventually makes a good friend, another Asian student, and even gets involved in a relationship with a classmate. The another is the story of the Monkey King, who gets picked on by the other celestials for being a monkey. The third is about Danny, who has to suffer the agony of a visit from his very stereotyped cousin, Chin-Kee.

All three tales collide at the end when Danny lashes back at Chin-Kee, revealing the connection between the three tales and what Danny has to do to try to …

Review of 'American Born Chinese' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

I picked up this graphic novel when my library was getting rid of it, it being one of the only english titles caught my attention, I don't know what to rate this but settled on a 3 because it was quick, i like the story of the Monkey King and how it merged with the contemporary settings, but it was too silly at times, and the story went over my head

Review of 'American Born Chinese' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Here is what I wrote about it in my blog:

"This was a book recommended by one of my colleagues, so I knew it would probably be good. It was great. It contains three seemingly unrelated stories: the story of Jin Wang, who just wants to fit in at school when his parents move into a new neighborhood; the story of Danny and his very Chinese cousin Chin Kee; and the story of the Monkey King. At first, the book seems to be a set of separate stories, but as one reads, the connection becomes apparent. The book does have some very funny moments too, and there are some lessons here and there as well. And when you get to the end, you just don't quite want it to end. A pleasure to read, and a fast read as well. I highly recommend this one."

I borrowed this one from …

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Subjects

  • Comic strip fiction / graphic novels
  • General
  • Chinese Americans
  • Juvenile Fiction
  • Children's Books/Young Adult Graphic Novels
  • Social Issues - Prejudice & Racism
  • Children: Young Adult (Gr. 7-9)
  • People & Places - United States - Asian American
  • Identity
  • Comics & Graphic Novels - General
  • Comics & Graphic Novels / Graphic Novels / General
  • Fiction
  • Graphic novels