Book Riot's Read Harder Challenge discussion
2017 Read Harder Challenge
>
Task #5: Read a book by an immigrant or with a central immigration narrative
message 51:
by
Teresa
(new)
Jan 08, 2017 12:38PM

reply
|
flag


Oh I hope so! Its been on my TBR forever! I was going to read In the Time of the Butterflies but Free Food for Millionaires has been in the pike a lot longer.


That certainly would count. It's a wonderful book too.


Yes, I would say so!


My local book club read this last year. There is little to no connection to immigrants or immigration, so I don't think it fits the prompt. The story is a fiction account of New York City sending orphans on a train west to be adopted by families in the Midwest. I live in Minnesota and there was a recent local play dramatizing the stops here and families selecting kids off the train. There were several descendants of the Orphan Train adoptees in the audience.

My local book club read this last year. There is little to no connection to immigrants or immig..."
But Vivian was definitely an Irish immigrant, and many of the other children were immigrants or from immigrant families. When my book club read it, we had a lot of discussion about how they were treated because they were immigrants as well as orphans and how this theme informed Molly's story of being considered "other."
ETA: The author is from England and has now settled in the US, so she is very likely an immigrant.

It is a YA-book by a writer who is part Norwegian, part Chilean, born and raised in Romsås in Oslo, Norway, a part of the city which is almost entirely inhabitated by immigrants. The novel is seen from the pov of a teenagegirl living in Romsås and is written in the slang that rises from the area.
So - YA, immigrant author and immigrant narrative AND from the POV of a teenage immigrant girl.


I may take this challenge to finally read Homegoing (if it counts)





Well, either for this or debut novel. It depends on wether I come across something that will fit either challenge in my TBR pile before May.


Oscar Wao would definitely work for the immigration narrative. Diaz as born in the DR. Also worth noting, It is one of my favorite books ever. Love it or hate it it is like no other book you have ever read.

Oscar ..."
Oh I was focusing on the immigration story but yes, I see that the author can be an immigrant as well. Good! I just finished the audiobook narrated by Lin-Manuel Miranda. :) It was good! But it was tough.

Other books I want to read that qualify: The Book of Unknown Americans, [book:Middlesex|21..."
I love My Antonia!

Wow, there are so many footnotes, it is hard to imagine it as an audiobook. Glad it worked. I just read another audiobook Lin-Manuel Miranda read ("Aristotle & Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe") and his narration was fantastic.

I *love* Dante and Aristotle! I listened to the audiobook a few years ago. Lin-Manuel Miranda is a fabulous narrator.



The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down: A Hmong Child, Her American Doctors, and the Collision of Two Cultures by [author..."
This is such an excellent book! I love it.

I just finished Imbolo Mbue's Behold the Dreamers for this one and I really enjoyed it. Its story & themes were very engrossing and thought provoking & I really enjoyed the characters as well. I'm going to be thinking about what this tale had to tell for a while.


I plan to read this one too. Glad to hear it's engaging!

The first few pages provide an interesting parallel to my own family heritage. The Irish hero arrives in America in 1867, along with several other anti-slavery activists who were expelled from Ireland. They proceeded to settle Montana. Our first Norwegian and Swedish ancestors arrived in New York and Boston in 1867, following twenty years of socialist enforcement of land reforms in which many families were expelled from their farms. They settled Wisconsin.

One character is an undocumented immigrant from Jamaica whose family is going to be deported.
Another character is the child of Korean immigrants.





Just bought it and was hoping it would fit somewhere into this challenge! :)

Books mentioned in this topic
The Last Days of Café Leila (other topics)The Book of Strange New Things (other topics)
Brooklyn (other topics)
The Jaguar's Children (other topics)
The Buddha in the Attic (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Adjoa Andoh (other topics)Imbolo Mbue (other topics)
Roshi Fernando (other topics)
Yuri Herrera (other topics)
Scaachi Koul (other topics)
More...