20 great books by Asian American authors
May is Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month, and what better way to celebrate than to stack your to-be-read lists with some of the many incredible works from Asian American authors. Although much of popular culture in America still struggles with producing consistent and diverse Asian American representation, there is a treasure trove of works by Asian American authors that provide readers a multitude of stories, characters, and experiences.
麻豆原创 compiled a list of 20 popular books written by Asian American authors, spanning various decades, genres, and subjects. These books exemplify the endless expanse of varying Asian and Asian American stories and experiences. Each book has been selected and vetted to be the best of the best, whether because they've been met with esteemed acclaim and earned awards or because they became bestsellers that sparked conversation among book clubs everywhere.
This list has genres for every kind of book lover鈥攎emoirs, romances, mysteries, graphic novels鈥攁nd the premises of these titles range from a grief-stricken character bereaved of their mother and a generation-spanning familial epic to those that lay bare the complicated experience of race and class struggles and others that deal with high school crushes.
The Queen of the Night
- Author: Alexander Chee
鈥淭he Queen of the Night鈥 is a historical fiction novel set in 1882 Paris amid the decadence and high drama of the Paris Opera. Readers follow the story of soprano Lilliet Berne, who is finally given the chance to star in an original role, only to discover that the opera鈥檚 libretto suspiciously resembles the story of her secretive past.
Alexander Chee鈥檚 writing is full of suspense, mystery, and romantic intrigue. Chee received the Whiting Award for his first novel 鈥淓dinburgh,鈥 and his second novel, 鈥淭he Queen of the Night,鈥 is no less distinct.
The Joy Luck Club
- Author: Amy Tan
Amy Tan鈥檚 鈥淭he Joy Luck Club,鈥 first published in 1989, made waves as a (then-rare) commercially successful novel from an Asian American author about the Asian American experience. The novel follows four Chinese American immigrant families in San Francisco, the mothers and daughters of which meet weekly to play mahjong, eat food, and commiserate in what they call The Joy Luck Club. The novel was adapted into a film of the same name in 1993.
鈥淭he Joy Luck Club鈥 has received mixed reviews over the years concerning the complicated nature of racial representation, but it has no doubt had an enduring influence on both literature and film.
The White Tiger
- Author: Aravind Adiga
鈥淭he White Tiger鈥 is a novel of dark humor and disturbing honesty about India鈥檚 caste system, as told by narrator Balram Halwai and his morally questionable rise through the ranks from village boy to successful businessman. This action-packed novel exposes the corruption deeply embedded into the unflinching Indian caste system and the poverty it can perpetuate.
Aravind Adiga鈥檚 debut novel, 鈥淭he White Tiger鈥 took home the Man Booker Prize in 2008. It was later adapted into a Netflix film, released in 2021.
Everything I Never Told You
- Author: Celeste Ng
鈥淓verything I Never Told You鈥 follows a mixed-race Chinese American family in 1970s Ohio. When the middle child, and the favorite, of Chinese immigrants Marilyn and James Lee is found dead, the rest of the family unravels, secrets are revealed, and the meaning of home and family is put into question. Celeste Ng鈥檚 writing is as poignant as it is dramatically enticing.
鈥淓verything I Never Told You鈥 landed on the New York Times Best Seller list and won the Massachusetts Book Award, the Asian/Pacific Librarians Association Award for Literature, and the American Library Association鈥檚 Alex Award.
Interior Chinatown
- Author: Charles Yu
Winner of the 2020 National Book Award for Fiction, "Interior Chinatown" is told in the format of a screenplay. It follows "Generic Asian Man" Willis Wu, who is perpetually playing the "Background Oriental Male" in a fictional police procedural, but dreams of one day playing "Kung Fu Guy" on the big screen. The novel is Yu's wry and heartfelt sendup of Hollywood Asian stereotypes, exposing the lack of onscreen representation for Asian Americans.
The Border of Paradise
- Author: Esm茅 Weijun Wang
A gripping and expansive family drama, 鈥淭he Border of Paradise鈥 is a story told over multiple years and multiple locations from multiple perspectives. Bookmarked by two suicide attempts, it follows David, a Brooklynite who struggles with neuroses; Daisy, the woman he marries and has a daughter with in Taiwan; and Marianne, his childhood companion with whom he has an affair and produces another daughter in California. Secrets and hidden pasts are revealed as a complicated family dynamic unfolds.
Esm茅 Weijun Wang鈥檚 novel has been praised for its beautiful prose and well thought-out characters.
They Called Us Enemy
- Author: George Takei, Justin Eisinger, Steven Scott, and Harmony Becker
George Takei is an actor and activist who broke boundaries with his role on 鈥淪tar Trek鈥 in the 1960s. In 鈥淭hey Called Us Enemy,鈥 his graphic memoir, readers follow the story of his early childhood spent in an American concentration camp for Japanese Americans during World War II. The memoir reveals the political and human atrocities that the American government has been responsible for, all from a very personal and accessible perspective. Takei鈥檚 graphic memoir won the 2020 Asian/Pacific American Award for Young Adult Literature.
Waiting
- Author: Ha Jin
Ha Jin鈥檚 novel 鈥淲aiting鈥 won the 1999 National Book Award, and for good reason. Set in contemporary China, and sprawling over 20 years, the story revolves around Lin Kong, an army doctor; his wife, who he does not love; and his girlfriend, a nurse at the hospital where he works. Based loosely on a true story, the novel is a complex and expertly written study of modern longing that grapples with centuries of custom and expectation.
To All the Boys I've Loved Before
- Author: Jenny Han
鈥淭o All the Boys I鈥檝e Loved Before鈥 is a #1 New York Times bestselling romantic comedy that follows protagonist Lara Jean, a Korean American high schooler, who writes secret love letters that were never meant to be read. When the letters are accidentally mailed out, she鈥檚 forced to deal with the kind of attention she鈥檚 always hoped to avoid and the feelings that come with it.
Praised for Han鈥檚 relatable writing, 鈥淭o All the Boys I鈥檝e Loved Before鈥 has also been adapted into a popular Netflix film series.
Interpreter of Maladies
- Author: Jhumpa Lahiri
"Interpreter of Maladies" is a collection of nine short stories, linked by the common theme of Indian and Indian American protagonists balancing their cultural roots with the "New World." Published in 1999, Jhumpa Lahiri's writing has been praised as elegant and the book itself has been praised for offering deliberately expansive representations of Indians and Indian Americans. "Interpreter of Maladies" won both the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award in 2000.
Kite Runner
- Author: Khaled Hosseini
鈥淭he Kite Runner鈥 is the first novel from Afghan American author Khaled Hosseini. The book tells the story of Amir, who comes from a wealthy family in Kabul, and whose tale spans 30 years of change and disruption in Afghanistan. It follows the relationship Amir has with his father and the unlikely friendship he establishes with his father鈥檚 servant鈥檚 son, Hassan.
It maintained its place on the New York Times Best Seller list for two years and won the San Francisco Chronicle Best Book of the Year Award.
The Woman Warrior: Memoirs of a Girlhood Among Ghosts
- Author: Maxine Hong Kingston
鈥淭he Woman Warrior: Memoirs of a Girlhood Among Ghosts鈥 was first published in 1976 and is unique in its merging of autobiography and Chinese folklore. Author Maxine Hong Kingston uses this undefinable genre to tell us the stories that helped define her. Kingston has received criticism for her representation of Chinese culture, but her work continues to spark conversation on the subject. The book was a National Book Critics Circle Award winner.
Crying in H Mart
- Author: Michelle Zauner
鈥淐rying in H Mart鈥 is the debut book from the singer and guitarist of Japanese Breakfast, Michelle Zauner. The memoir details her experience coping with the death of her mother and growing up as a Korean American in Oregon. Zauner鈥檚 writing provides readers with detailed descriptions of food, and how it has helped her navigate her culture and her grief. The memoir won Best Memoir & Autobiography at the 2021 Goodreads Choice Awards.
Pachinko
- Author: Min Jin Lee
鈥淧achinko鈥 is Min Jin Lee鈥檚 second novel. It was a National Book Award nominee and a New York Times bestseller. The novel tells the story of one family spanning four generations, beginning in early 1900s Korea, and follows the family鈥檚 fight to thrive as exiles in 20th-century Japan. 鈥淧achinko鈥 was adapted into a series for Apple TV+ in 2022.
All You Can Ever Know
- Author: Nicole Chung
"All You Can Ever Know" is a memoir that follows author Nicole Chung's experience as a Korean adoptee raised by white parents. The memoir weaves together the author's personal journey to find her birth parents, her search for belonging, and her evolving understanding of her identity. "All You Can Ever Know" received rave reviews upon its publication and was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award for Autobiography in 2018.
On Earth We鈥檙e Briefly Gorgeous
- Author: Ocean Vuong
鈥淥n Earth We鈥檙e Briefly Gorgeous鈥 is the debut novel from Vietnamese American poet Ocean Vuong. It鈥檚 written in the form of a letter from a son to his mother who cannot read. The letter follows the history of the son鈥檚 family from before he was born and continues on to reveal details of his life about which his mother has never known. Vuong has been applauded for his poetic prose style, and the novel has been praised for its unique exploration of race, masculinity, class, and freedom. 鈥淥n Earth We鈥檙e Briefly Gorgeous鈥 was also a contender for the 2019 National Book Award for Fiction.
Trust Exercise
- Author: Susan Choi
鈥淭rust Exercise鈥 by Susan Choi was the winner of the 2019 National Book Award for Fiction. The national bestseller is full of narrative twists, surprises, and head-scratchers as it follows the lives of students at a performing arts high school in the 1980s in the American suburbs. The complicated narrative techniques of the novel have sparked much debate and make it the perfect book for a heated book club meeting.
The Sympathizer
- Author: Viet Thanh Nguyen
鈥淭he Sympathizer鈥 is Viet Thanh Nguyen鈥檚 debut novel and the winner of the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. Set in 1975, the book follows a general of the South Vietnamese army who flees to Los Angeles with a few compatriots to begin a new life. The narrator of the novel, however, is one of the compatriots, the captain, who is also a spy for the Viet Cong. The book is at once a spy novel, a love story, and an exploration of the extreme politics of both 1970s America and Vietnam.
A Thousand Years of Good Prayers
- Author: Yiyun Li
鈥淎 Thousand Years of Good Prayers鈥 is the debut collection of short stories from Chinese American author Yiyun Li. The stories are thematically linked by following the lives of Chinese and Chinese American protagonists and their experiences. The collection won the PEN/Hemingway Award, and the story 鈥淚mmortality鈥 won The Paris Review鈥檚 Plimpton Prize for new writers.
A Jar of Dreams
- Author: Yoshiko Uchida
"A Jar of Dreams" is a children's novel from author Yoshiko Uchida, typically meant to be read by middle-school aged children, but the story is for all ages. The novel follows Rinko, an 11-year-old in Great Depression-era California who struggles with being "different" because she is Japanese. When her Aunt Waka comes to visit from Japan, Rinko learns to love and appreciate her heritage.