Archive | Ethan Galvin RSS feed for this section

Celebrate Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month!

4 May

Check out a variety of terrific adult fiction and nonfiction books for AAPI Heritage Month available as ebooks from eLibraryNJ, eBCCLS, and Hoopla. Also available in print from BCCLS libraries.

Adult Fiction
Interior Chinatown
Charles Yu
A deeply personal story about race, pop culture, assimilation, and escaping the roles we are forced to play. Willis Wu discovers the secret history of Chinatown & the buried legacy of his own family.

You can also read a previous post about Yu’s How to Live Safely in A Science Fictional Universe.

Win Me Something
Kyle Lucia Wu
A nuanced coming-of age debut story about a biracial Chinese American woman in NJ who asks what it really means to belong and how she might begin to define her own life.

The Verifiers
Jane Pek
A young Chinese American woman is hired by a detective agency to verify people’s online dating personas. But when a client turns up dead, she investigates.

My Year Abroad
Chang-Rae Lee
An entertaining story of a young American whose life is transformed when a Chinese American businessman suddenly takes him under his wing on an adventure across Asia.

A Song Everlasting
Ha Jin
A timely story that follows a famous Chinese singer severed from his country as he tries to find his way in the U.S. and reclaim his ethnic identity and maintain his art.

Homeland Elegies
Ayad Akhtar
A Muslim-American family struggles to survive in the U.S. following the tragedy of 9/11. The compelling story takes us from palatial suites in Europe to guerilla lookouts in the Afghan mountains.

Pachinko
Min Jin Lee
A saga that follows a Korean family from the 1900s through 8 decades & 4 generations. A Korean girl’s unplanned pregnancy threatens to shame her family so she leaves Korea starting a chain of events.

Searching for Sylvie Lee
Jean Kwok
A drama untangling the complicated ties that bind two Chinese sisters and their mother as the eldest daughter disappears and family secrets emerge.

Adult Non-Fiction
Rise: A Pop History of Asian America From the Nineties to Now
Jeff Yang
A mass media and pop culture tribute to Asian Americans. This vivid scrapbook focuses on voices, emotions and memories from an era in which Asian culture was transformed.

On Monday, May 23 at 6:00 pm, join us for a special AAPI Book Club discussing “Rise” led by Jennie Pu, Hoboken Public Library Director in the Small Programming Room (lower level, 500 Park Ave, Main Branch). See the HPL calendar for other great AAPI Heritage Month events!

Crying in the H Mart
Michelle Zauner
A powerful memoir from the indie rock star of Japanese Breakfast fame about growing up Korean-American, losing her mother & finding herself.

The Groom Will Keep His Name
Matt Ortile
A collection of tender essays on sex, dating, and identity from a gay Filipino immigrant learning to navigate race, resistance, and romance in America.

This is What America Looks Like
Ilhman Omar
An intimate memoir by the first African refugee, first Somali-American, & one of the first Muslim women elected to Congress.

Facing the Mountain
Daniel James Brown
A true story of the Japanese-American heroes in WWII. Interviews with the families of 4 soldiers who were part of the Japanese-American Army unit that overcame brutal odds in Europe.

Flying Free
Cecilia Rodriguez Aragon
The compelling story of how Filipino Cecilia Aragon broke barriers and became the first female Latino pilot on the U.S. Aerobatic Team.

Book List Adapted from 2022 AAPI Heritage Month Brochure created by:
Ethan Galvin
Information and Digital Services Librarian

Read Until You Understand: The Profound Wisdom of Black Life and Literature

16 Feb

As we celebrate Black History Month, it seems only fitting that I recommend a book that focuses on the empowering understanding of African American literature, history, music, and art. Read Until You Understand by Farah Jasmine Griffin clearly is a compelling memoir and tribute to her beloved father, who died when she was nine, bequeathing her with a closet full of remarkable books about the Black experience written by and about prominent African Americans throughout history.  Griffin as taken to heart the phrase “read until you understand,” a line her father wrote in a note to her, and has devoted her life to reading and comprehending this collection of inherited books.

A Guggenheim fellow and professor of African American Studies at Columbia University,  she has devoted herself to passing these works and their wisdom on to generations of students. She shares a lifetime of discoveries such as the ideas that inspired the stunning oratory of Frederick Douglass and Malcolm X, the soulful music of Marvin Gaye and Stevie Wonder, the daring literature of Phyllis Wheatley, James Baldwin, Langton Hughes and Toni Morrison, the inventive artistry of Romare Bearden and Gordon Parks, and many more. Exploring these works through such themes as justice, rage, self-determination, beauty, joy, and mercy allows her to help readers grapple with the ongoing struggle for Black freedom and the turmoil and dilemmas still facing African Americans today.  

This book is designed as a seminar, because for stretches Griffin is an encouraging literature professor surveying African American novels, poetry, and essays and charting their meaning. In other passages, she is a reflective memoirist looking back on a life of reading and loving and longing, and about growing up in a tightly woven Black community in south Philadelphia. And in other moments, she emerges as a cultural and political observer pinpointing the momentary bits of freedom that provide grace in Black lives.

These threads are bound together by the two people who loom over Griffin’s life and mind. One is Toni Morrison, whose novels Griffin first encountered as a child, propelling her to reflect on mercy, justice, rage, death and beauty. The other is Griffin’s late father, Emerson, who introduced her to Black literature and foundational texts of American civics, who taught her the Gettysburg Address, the preamble to the Constitution and the opening of the Declaration of Independence before she started school. He instilled in her a love of reading at a young age and encouraged her to be quizzical and to learn about the African Americans plight throughout U.S. history

As someone who developed an early love of books and reading, I can still fondly recall when the   weekly Bookmobile would visit our small rural elementary school in Vermont and I was allowed to freely roam about the stacks and choose three books that piqued my interest. I had a constant thirst for knowledge as a child and Read Until You Understand reminds me of those delightful early childhood days when the Bookmobile would visit and I was given free access to explore. I can understand why Griffin has such fond memories of the legacy her father left her and why she so anxiously wants to impart that knowledge on future generations.    

Written by:
Ethan Galvin
Information and Digital Services Librarian