From the bestselling author of Depth Takes a Holiday: a comic monologue for sons and daughters everywhere who feel that their parents must have been beamed down from another planet. This description may be from another edition of this product.
Excellent Chinese and German accents, wonderfully funny!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
I loved the audio version of this book. The print version probably doesn't do it justice, as so much of the impact is in the accents and inflections of Loh's performance. This is not a mean-spirited book. One can hear Loh's affection for her parents even as she pokes fun an their idiosyncrasies. As an audio reviewer I listen to many books, but Loh's earns top marks. It's a funny and touching tribute to our multicultural society.
Her Best Work Ever
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
This is Sandra Tsing Loh's landmark work. In it, she weds her keen powers of observation with a story that is heartfelt and important. Readers (and listeners of NPR) who are familiar with her more pointedly comedic commentaries will relish this work, the full blossoming of a wonderfully unique writer. The landscape of this memoir is highly specific, but the themes are universal. It is both gorgeously written and highly affecting.
This lady can write; she will be one of tomorrow's stars
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
Sandra Tsing Loh is a wonderful writer. This book and her set of essays "Depth Takes a Holiday" showcase a new talent. She combines humor with a tight, very easy, flowing language. "Aliens In America" consists of 3 essays, each about her family and her father -- the retired aerospace engineer who decides to import another wife from China. This is a very insightful, fun book. It's short and will leave you asking for more. Follow this lady, she's good. She'll probably be the Dorothy Parker of 2000 and beyond.
Immigrants in the West Coast melting pot
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
I'd rather would have heard or seen the performances these stories are based on, simply because the spoken word with all its inflictions and shadings would have added to the mood of the pieces and made the subjectivity of them more obvious. Still, I enjoyed the book a lot, and I think it describes well the struggles a second generation immigrant has to go through while trying to adapt to the mainstream culture of the country her parents have moved to. And in contrast to the previous reviewer I think that Loh is not so sure whether it is better to burn all the bridges, and turn American, as she is trying to do as a young girl and as an adolescent, or to stick to the culture of her ancestors, as her father is doing. Aside from that, the stories are also quite funny in their descriptions of the battle of wits between her free-wheeling German mother, who is always looking for fun and luxury, and her Chinese father, who in the meantime braces himself for impeding disaster.
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