Digging to America
by Anne Tyler
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I'M DOING THAT WEIRD THING AGAIN.
It occurs more regularly at those points in life when your bookshelf is particularly bare. I should certainly know, because right now half my books are trying to flatten out a bunch of AMAZING (and yet equally horrible) 90's movie posters I found at a garage sale last month. I'm thinking about wallpapering our living room with the likes of "Heat", "Weird Creatures", "Dante's Peak", and, of course, my favorite, "Jingle All ...more
It occurs more regularly at those points in life when your bookshelf is particularly bare. I should certainly know, because right now half my books are trying to flatten out a bunch of AMAZING (and yet equally horrible) 90's movie posters I found at a garage sale last month. I'm thinking about wallpapering our living room with the likes of "Heat", "Weird Creatures", "Dante's Peak", and, of course, my favorite, "Jingle All ...more
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Read in March, 2007
Portrait of Two Families as They Become One
This was a very quick read. Before I knew it, I was almost finished, and that's because of Anne Tyler's keen ability to paint vivid characters and vivid scenes. I believed this story would focus on the adoption of Asian babies, but this aspect is only in the background. Digging To America springs forth from the adoption of two Korean girls--one to the Donaldsons, an American family, the other to the Yazdun Family, who are of Iranian h...more
This was a very quick read. Before I knew it, I was almost finished, and that's because of Anne Tyler's keen ability to paint vivid characters and vivid scenes. I believed this story would focus on the adoption of Asian babies, but this aspect is only in the background. Digging To America springs forth from the adoption of two Korean girls--one to the Donaldsons, an American family, the other to the Yazdun Family, who are of Iranian h...more
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Read in May, 2008
recommended to Giedra by:
book clubrecommends it for: anyone interested in different cultures, adoption, assimilation, family relationships
The book is about the lives of 2 families who meet in the airport and become friends when they realize that both are at the airport to greet their newly adopted baby daughters from Korea. One family is traditional white American; the other is a family of recent immigrants from Iran. The book follows their friendship over 8-10 years, and explores what it means to belong, whether belonging to a family, the feeling of belonging as an "American," etc.
The book made me think a lot abou...more
The book made me think a lot abou...more
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Read in June, 2008
This author’s name has come up a few times at Reading Seals, and I was feeling the need to branch out after having limited myself (pretty much) to University Required Reading, and books from my Waitshelf, since the end of February. That’s a long time not to have a bunch of library books on the go. I think I was suffering depletion.
No longer! I read 2 books on the aeroplanes that took me from Auckland to Wellington, Wellington to Dunedin (same plane, but we had to disembark and then re...more
No longer! I read 2 books on the aeroplanes that took me from Auckland to Wellington, Wellington to Dunedin (same plane, but we had to disembark and then re...more
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Read in June, 2008
I wonder how writers think up the premise for their books sometimes...this is one of those instances.
Two families are waiting in the BWI Airport each for an adopted baby from Korea. One family is Iranian-American, the other is pretty WASP-y. As a result of their shared experience, the two families and their immediate families become friends, in the most complex sense of the word. Throughout the years, they navigate each other's customs and child-rearing techniques. The WASP-y family alw...more
Two families are waiting in the BWI Airport each for an adopted baby from Korea. One family is Iranian-American, the other is pretty WASP-y. As a result of their shared experience, the two families and their immediate families become friends, in the most complex sense of the word. Throughout the years, they navigate each other's customs and child-rearing techniques. The WASP-y family alw...more
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Read in September, 2007
recommends it for:
book clubs, mothers
I really enjoyed this book! I found myself telling people about it over the week or so that I read it. I found it really fascinating -- this look at Americans and "foreigners" -- seen through this tale of two very different families who are brought together by the adoption of Korean baby girls. I loved how different the two families were -- heritage, parenting approaches, personality, etc. I could appreciate the two new mothers and their varied feelings. I could relate to both Bit...more
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Read in December, 2006
Tyler creates an interesting story centering around two families who adopt children from Korea in the autumn of 1997. They meet at the airport on the "arrival day" and subsequently plan to meet on the day in the future to commemorate the children's arrival in America. The most interesting aspects of the book surround Maryam, the grandmother of one of the girls, an Iranian widow who struggles to find her place in America; and that of Dave, the American widower, who is the grandfather of...more
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Read in March, 2007
love her stuff--i went through a phase at some point in high school when i read every book she'd written. it was nice this time around to have a little distance from that reading spree, as i have a hard time remembering which was which. it also helped that the plot of this one was different than her others, most of which have similar characters--quirky families, with a slightly scattered woman at the center--in the same setting--baltimore. this one was about two quirky baltimore families, one of...more
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Read in January, 2007
Those who know me know I'm not a big fan of Tyler's work so this is a very high rating from me! I usually find her female protagonists extremely frustrating and I wasn't let down in this case, despite developing an early liking for Maryam, the Iranian matriarch and widow who dominated the story with her desire to remain an outsider in all situations. I was a bit sorry we got so much of her inner ruminations on her culture versus American widower Dave's, and enjoyed the interplay of her son Sami'...more
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Read in September, 2007
I've read several Ane Tyler books. And every time, after I'm done reading one, I ask myself "why do I continue to read her?"
This book is about an Iranian couple who adopt a Korean baby and raise her American and an American couple - who become friends with the Iranian couple - who also adopt a Korean girl the same day the Iran's adopt - and keep her birth name and dress her in costumes, etc. It's interesting the viewpoints of the Iranians to the Americans and vice-vers; how the...more
This book is about an Iranian couple who adopt a Korean baby and raise her American and an American couple - who become friends with the Iranian couple - who also adopt a Korean girl the same day the Iran's adopt - and keep her birth name and dress her in costumes, etc. It's interesting the viewpoints of the Iranians to the Americans and vice-vers; how the...more
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Read in July, 2008
The WaPo blurb on the front of the paperback edition says: "Tyler has delivered something startlingly fresh while retaining everything we love about her work." I beg to differ. This novel is certainly different from her earlier work--although neither "startling" or "fresh" seem quite appropriate--but it does not retain everything I love from her earler work. How could it? She has moved from profiling the interior lives of quirky, fringe characters to tackling Big Th...more
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recommends it for:
Sandra, Mo, Holly
This could have been just another light book but there's something more here. The book is saved from parody because the author really empathizes and understands her characters. Each is comical and human, even the crazy Bitsy (who is a piece of work). And the author also really understands the immigrant's psyche. I was touched by Maryam's refusal to define herself as the "stereotypical" Iranian yet her objections to Americanization. She lives in that gray area that many who have left th...more
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Read in October, 2007
If I were a novelist, I would be so jealous of Anne Tyler's ability to create characters. Her best-developed ones are the introverted thinky ones, but she can also lovingly and sympathetically introduce emotive talky ones. I love to watch Tyler throw these types together and see what they do.
The novel centers on two families who adopt Korean babies on the same day. The families adopt different, but equally loving, parenting styles for their daughters. I loved the way Tyler portrayed the ...more
The novel centers on two families who adopt Korean babies on the same day. The families adopt different, but equally loving, parenting styles for their daughters. I loved the way Tyler portrayed the ...more
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Read in February, 2008
recommends it for:
anyone who wants a clearer understanding of all people
What a marvelous book to show that the differences that we perceive in people from other lands are really not that big, or that different. It is all in perception on both sides. I listened to this on audio book and the distinctive voices used by the reader were a big part of character development.
Ms. Tyler seems to know how to express not only perception but also heartfelt feeling of not only older but younger people no matter where they come from or how long they have been in the U. S. ...more
Ms. Tyler seems to know how to express not only perception but also heartfelt feeling of not only older but younger people no matter where they come from or how long they have been in the U. S. ...more
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Read in October, 2007
This book is simply a lovely story about the friendships of two families who each adopted little girls from Korea. In a twist, one of the adopting families is Iranian which brings up a litany of questions like: what does it really mean to be "American?"; should internationally adopted children keep ties to their heritage language and culture?; and is the American way of raising children really the best? While these families are bound by their daughters and their shared experience a...more
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Read in July, 2008
Its a story about two families who come to know each other over the years because they have both adopted Korean babies. The reason I picked up this book I might not have otherwise read is that a family friend read it and told me it features Iranian-Americans! I'm always intrigued by the depiction of Iranian-Americans in "mainstream" American literature (a la "The House of Sand and Fog; not literature by Iranian-American authors) and so I read it. As it turns out,the author's la...more
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My book club read this title a couple of months ago, and we had much the same reaction. Characters too one-dimensional and not particularly likable, no riveting conflict that engages the reader. Too much of the book just felt like a narration of daily events and conversations of limited import. The author chose an interesting premise for the book--one Iranian and one very American family each adopt a Korean orphan, coincidentally at the same time. They meet at the airport when picking up the in...more
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Read in January, 2007
recommends it for:
women's fiction readers
I found Digging to America a sweet, compassionate tale of mothers and their love for families…their own families and the families around them. Starting off with the adoption of two Asian girls by two different Baltimore families, Tyler does a great job of combining cultural experiences with those of family and life experiences. Not only the Asian culture is touched upon in this book…one of the families who adopts a child is Iranian. Both adopting families mesh well, with cultural differences...more
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Read in October, 2007
I'm sort of a latecomer to Anne Tyler - I read "The Accidental Tourist" when it first came out, didn't particularly like it, and didn't pick up anything else of hers for quite a few years. But then when "Back When We Were Grownups" came out, I thought it sounded interesting, decided to give the author another try, and fell in love. Thought her next book, "The Amateur Marriage" was even better. So I had very high hopes for this one...and I wasn't disappointed. Al...more
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Read in July, 2006
Ann Tyler is among my favorite authors. I confess to enjoying just about everything she's ever written. What I find most amazing about Tyler is how she is able to take a seemingly small, yet critical moment in someone's life and weave a complete story from it. Digging to America is no exception. It begins with the chance meeting of two families at the Baltimore Airport when their respective adopted daughters from Korea arrive. The intertwining of these two families because of this one event...more
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