A rather thick collection of all kinds of types of literature: non-fiction, fiction, poetry and a single piece of drama. The pieces included varied, showing many different views of how an Asian American sees (or saw) their lives in the United States, from angry reactionary pieces to calm and poetic tales. Those included represent many of the first Asian American writers, and the editor himself claims to be very instrumental in getting the whole discipline off the ground. Unfortunately, some of the pieces included aren't very good as art past allowing the reader to understand the "Asian American Experience," and so came across as somewhat boring and limited. Others, such as Toshio Mori's "1936," really dug deeper past a simple reaction to a true, human reflection of life. As a place to start, such as for students (indeed, I'm using this in my Asian-American Literature course), it is a very good jumping-off point to discover authors and as a broad overview of the literature.
As a final, though secondary note, the editing in the book is somewhat sub-par, as there are many mistakes in spelling and punctuation. Normally this would be a simple nuisance, but at times the authors write in dialect, and it is difficult to know whether or not the "mistakes" come from the authors themselves or the editors.
This was a harder book to rate, simply because of the difference in my enjoying the stories yet not enjoying the anthology. I loved many of the stories and poems in this anthology, but there were a lot of misprinted things, a lot of spelling errors, and after speaking with a featured author it was clear that those mistakes had been made evident to the publisher who never cleared up the mistakes. Besides those errors, this was an enjoyable anthology.