Diving into the Top 10 finds the first of TWO titles by Jennifer Haigh and a graphic novel.
#9) American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang – Gene Luen Yang’s Award-winning graphic novel unfolds as three distinct stories that weave together by the book’s end. Jin Wang is the only Chinese-American student at this school, and he wants nothing more than to blend in. Danny is an All-American high school basketball star who is mortified when his Taiwanese cousin, Chin-Kee visits for a couple of weeks every year. The Monkey King strives for divinity, looking to transform his identity to something far more than he is. With an insightful eye on American youth, Yang creates a tale that will resonate with anyone.
#8) Mrs. Kimble by Jennifer Haigh – Jennifer Haigh’s first novel is a tough read. Not in the sense that it is boring, or dense, or lacks punctuation or anything like that. The subject matter was just upsetting in a subtle way that felt like part of another time. Perhaps that’s a good thing in this day and age, but Mrs. Kimble focuses on a charming man of dubious ethics, who woos women, marries them, and then inevitably disappoints them. What upset me about this novel was the desperate way the three Mrs. Kimbles loved their husband. Not that it felt false, which was probably the most upsetting thing about it.
Haigh is a great writer. Her prose is easy and enticing. Her characters nuanced and varied. I very much enjoyed the through-line of Charlie’s story, Mr. Kimble’s first child, and the way he grew up from an enterprising young boy, to a mistrustful, yet kind adult. As domestic dramas go, this is a winner, but one that may be occasionally frustrating in the best possible way.