America is in the Heart: A Personal History (Washington Paperbacks)
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America is in the Heart: A Personal History (Washington Paperbacks)

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3.77 of 5 stars 3.77  ·  rating details  ·  460 ratings  ·  52 reviews
First published in 1946, this autobiography of the well-known Filipino poet describes his boyhood in the Philippines, his voyage to America, and his years of hardship and despair as an itinerant laborer following the harvest trail in the rural West.

"America came to him in a public ward in the Los Angeles County Hospital while around him men died gasping for their last

...more
Paperback, 327 pages
Published January 1st 1973 by University of Washington Press (first published 1946)
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K.D.
K.D. rated it 4 of 5 stars
Shelves: local, memoirs
Carlos Bulosan (1913-1956) was the first Pilipino who published a novel in English while in the US. This was in 1946 when he was 33 years old. He was a native of Binalonan, Pangasinan and went to the US at the age of 17 landing in Seattle in 1930.

This book amazed me in many ways but it also raised several questions in my mind.

Reading this brings back John Steinbeck’s 1939 magnum opus The Grapes of Wrath. The only difference is that the white Joad family – the main charac...more
Leah
Leah rated it 4 of 5 stars
Shelves: memoir-ish, pinoy
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Monica
Monica rated it 5 of 5 stars
This is an autobiography about Carlos Bulosan's life in America. Bulosan was born in the central Philippines in Binalonan.
After arriving in America in 1930, at the age of 17, he discovered a new world of violence, racism and oppression.
I personally think this is a GREAT text! It is sad of course because it is about the lives of Filipinos in America and their struggles with racist people and even amongst themselves.
Anna
Anna rated it 5 of 5 stars
“Why was America so kind and yet so cruel? It was like going to war with other soldiers; some survived death but could not survive life.”

Carlos Bulosan left me clenching my chest. It didn’t matter whether or not this was a literal account (I’m sorry to tell most of readers, but most good stories aren’t). His story’s a powerful one, it speaks of violence, prejudice, exploitation and unexpected kindness. He writes with an unrelenting spirit, even when disenchanted by the world aro...more
Cyndi
Cyndi rated it 4 of 5 stars
Read for a class I am taking but thoroughly enjoyed. In four parts, the author places himself in events that were the push factor of many Filipinos to leave the Philippines and come to America. When they arrived the pull factors of democracy and freedom taught in their occupied land were not readily available to them. Prejudice, discrimination and xenophobia greeted the immigrants. Occasionally a bit of the American dream would introduce itself and illuminated the disparity of the land and it's ...more
Andrew
Andrew added it
Shelves: memoir
At present moment, especially in my own Seattle, Filipinos are a pretty wealthy, pretty widely respected group highly represented in business and political leadership. Hard to believe that a mere 70 years ago they were beaten for sport by shitheel Oregonian cops.

There isn't as much self-criticism and irony in America Is in the Heart as I normally like in my memoirs. But when the surrounding circumstances are so brutal (racism, murder, diseases of poverty, oppression of paisano popu...more
Amanda
Amanda rated it 2 of 5 stars
I read America is in the Heart for my Asian American Literature class. I'm not saying it's not interesting or not a good book, but I didn't like it that much. The style wasn't one that captured my attention.

I would recommend this book to anyone who's interested in Filipino history, immigration history, and racial discrimination. The interesting thing about this novel is that Busolan mixes autobiography, memoir, and a novel together in one text. Maybe some of these things did happen to ...more
Thomas Barnes
This book was painful to read - in that with every page I yearned to join Allos's struggle in finding his place in America and fight prejudice. I'm rather incredulous that all of these events could happen to one man, but as an ethnograph this story stands out as a retelling of the Filipino experience in coming to America. This book gave me a fresh perspective on my place and roots in the world, though the plethora of places and characters had a tendency to blend together and made for some modera...more
Sharon
Sharon rated it 5 of 5 stars
This was a very hard book to read. But it tells the painful truth of the Filipino immigrant experience in the 30's and 40's to and in the United States. Bulosan doesn't spare any details about his harsh experiences. It is just as important now, as a lesson from history about how segregation of any kind is so demoralizing, dehumanizing, and wrong--and it applies to today, too. This is a piece of the complex history of immigration in the US, of a group of people that is rarely spoken of in US ...more
Ruth
Ruth rated it 3 of 5 stars
It's the first immigration story I've read by a Philippino author, and maybe the first time I thought about how rough they've had it or of the weird historical relationship between that country & the US. I liked the clarity of the writing of the earlier parts about his growing up in the Philippines and all the economic problems his family experiences there, but there is also a lot to learn after he comes to the west coast, gets involved in the labor movement there, meets all sorts of unbelievab...more
sdw
This is not an autobiography. This is fiction or a composite of many different experiences. For example, Bulosan did not work in the canneries in Alaska. I’m not sure why this book is continually introduced as an autobiography, rather than a piece of literature that falsely presents itself as autobiography. Doing so contributes to the tendency to read certain forms of literature as historical fact, and also I think downplays the particular literary merits of this piece.

This book ...more
Amanda
Amanda rated it 5 of 5 stars
I will say this is one of my favorite books ever ...
, its heart wrenching and intriguing. You cant help feeling for the characters and hoping that everything will work out. I remember almost wanting to cry so many times. There is not an inch of this book that didnt hook itself into my heart. I learned so much that I never knew before. I remember reading the ending and feeling so sad and yet feeling that there was more than just the fact of events.Superbly written. I will never forget it.
Kirei
Kirei rated it 3 of 5 stars
Shelves: teens-and-adults
This is the story of a Filipino man who immigrates from his native country to the United States. Most of the story seems to take place during the Great Depression.
It was definitely worthwhile to read, but it is a real downer. One horrible thing after another happens. The beginning is much better than the end. The end was boring and I was desperate to finish the book.
Xmabaitx
This is the very first book about the Filipino American experience that I ever read. Despite certain complexities regarding how "true" its account is as an actual autobiography the book changed my life. Quintessential for students of Asian American Studies, Filipino American Studies, Ethnic Studies as well as for anyone interested in the "immigrant experience".
Ad Astra
There's a really stoic tone to the book and narration which I really don't enjoy personally. However, this tone does allow the author to move quickly from one location and part of his history to the next, which is valuable. I liked the book well enough, some of it seems sort of repetitive but given this is an autobiography I understand. The last 3rd of the book is where I feel it really picks up and gets extremely interesting as Carlos gets involved with the labor movements and not just the pain...more
Matthew
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Lance
Lance rated it 5 of 5 stars
Reminiscent of Fredrick Douglas' own journey into literacy and social consciousness, this book traces the life of a Filipino poet from a chaotic world on the fringe of American society to a world of poetry and social action. The book records an aspect of American culture that is a blind spot for most of us and will certainly deepen the complexity of anyone's view of America.
Saundra
Eye opener regarding history of Filipinos in this country and especially in California. The author's experience is horrifying and full of hope. The structure is strictly chronological. One traumatic event after the other. The author's patient voice and well-crafted sentences move you along. I couldn't put it down.
Christopher
Fascinating book about the discrimination that Asians, and especially Filipinos, faced when coming to America in the 30s and 40s, and one author's struggle against it. Minus one star only because there is a confusing blend of fact and fiction, when the book presents itself as fact.
Makenzie Rogowski
Stories about people coming to America are plenty and I can't get enough of them. I fear that if these stories are not told (and read) that we are doomed to repeat the travesty and promote the adversity that makes our world a difficult and sometimes impossible place to live in. Empathy and compassion are novelties in the animal kingdom, I often need to remind myself that humans have the capacity for both.
Bruce Reyes-chow
If you want a glimpse into early Filipino American immigration story, this is the standard read. Understood more as a novel than an auto-biography, American in the in the Heart gives you a wonderfully told story of an important part of American history.
Stephanie Pugh
This book is a heart-breaker. It describes a Filipino who immigrates to America and suffers from prejudice, discrimination, unemployment, and disease. Overall it has a compelling style, but you have to be invested in order to find anything in it.
Christina Aguilar
my two favorite quotes from the book:

"When you are in love, you are brave. You are not afraid of death." (p 53)

COMMENTARY - i'm not afraid of death; therefore, i am in love. hahaha. or i'm afraid of death but not know it.

*

"But we must not demand from America, because she is still our unfinished dream. Instead we must sacrifice for her: let her grow into bright maturity through our labors. If necessary we must give up our lives that she migh...more
Erwin Magbanua
A breathtaking account of the immigrant "manongs" who endured relentless discrimination and hardship to create the foundations upon which Filipino Americans thrive today. Heartbreaking at almost every turn, but you can't look away
Nick
Nick rated it 3 of 5 stars
I assigned this for a class and it's not half bad, certainly for its portrayal of Filipinos in the US in the 30s and 40s. The writing, on the other hand, is not so thrilling.
Ashlee Draper
Sad, sad, sad book. But the glimpses of human decency in it make it worth it I guess. That's the only reason I can think of that I would have liked it.
heel grabber
Interesting memoir/autobiography about Bulosan's early life especially concerning his time in the Filipino labor movement.
Cor
Cor rated it 5 of 5 stars
Excellent work by a very popular Filipino-American author. One of the Classic works that should be kept in a Library system.
Michael
America: human, good, and real. Well, at least Eileen Odell.
Jenmacapagal
Jenmacapagal is currently reading it
This is for my course called "Great Works".
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America Is In The Heart: A Personal History (Mass Market Paperback)
Nasa Puso ang Amerika: Kasaysayang Buhay ni Carlos Bulosan
America Is in the Heart (Paperback)
America Is in the Heart: A Personal History (Compact Disc)
America Is in the Heart (Washington Papers (Paperback))

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Carlos Sampayan Bulosan was a Filipino American novelist and poet best-known for the semi-autobiographical America is in the Heart.
More about Carlos Bulosan...
On Becoming Filipino: Selected Writings The Laughter of My Father Cry And Dedication All the Conspirators The Philippines Is in the Heart : A Collection of Short Stories

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last activity Feb 09, 2012 12:58am
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