GOLD HOUSE LAUNCHES BOOK CLUB TO ANCHOR AND EXPLORE ASIAN AMERICAN IDENTITY WITH LEADING WRITERS AND SCHOLARS

Los Angeles, CA – Gold House, the non-profit collective of Asian and Pacific Islander cultural leaders behind movements like #GoldOpen, is launching its inaugural Book Club on October 1st to uncover and codify Asian identity through other artistic mediums. After a successful pilot event with The Joy Luck Club this summer – which featured author Amy Tan with every Joy Luck Club daughter from the feature film (Lauren Tom, Ming-Na Wen, Rosalind Chao, and Tamlyn Tomita) – Gold House is formalizing the Book Club as a series of curated book lists and virtual events to help Asian Americans better understand their identity and culture in today’s political and social climate. 

The inaugural Book Club List features six books selected through a rigorous process with the help of an Advisory Council of leading Asian American writers, activists, and academics, including Amy Tan, Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Viet Thanh Nguyen, and many of the nation’s leading Asian American Studies professors.

One book will be featured each month beginning in October with Jose Antonio Vargas’ Dear America: Notes of an Undocumented Citizen in honor of Filipino American History Month. Each List will also feature a selection of Asian American children’s books to help families highlight diverse stories in the early stages of their children’s development. The live virtual events will expand on both to engage the community in identity-driven conversations, ranging from an interactive children’s story hour to panel discussions—featuring the selected authors as well as members of the Advisory Council.

“This has been a year of reckoning for race in America, and many APIs have re-examined what it means to be Asian American. We recognized this unique and galvanizing opportunity to create space for our community to explore the issues that inform our identity by leveraging the rich catalog of stories written by API authors. We’re excited to contribute these moments of discussion and introspection while highlighting our representation in the literary landscape,” Gold House Book Club Director Cindy Joung said. 

Gold House’s Book Club aims to continue important conversations around identity by exploring critical themes raised in each of the books, including immigration, intersectional identities, and generational and bi-cultural differences.

Find more information about Gold House’s Book Club and how you can participate at www.goldhouse.org/bookclub.

FALL 2020/WINTER 2021 BOOK CLUB LIST

(October 2020) Dear America: Notes of an Undocumented Citizen by Jose Antonio Vargas

(November 2020) Minor Feelings: An Asian American Reckoning by Cathy Park Hong

(December 2020) How to Write an Autobiographical Novel by Alexander Chee

(January 2021) American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang

(February 2021) Pachinko by Min Jin Lee

(March 2021) The Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri

Beginner Books: 

A Is for Awesome!: 23 Iconic Women Who Changed the World by Eva Chen

Round Is A Mooncake: A Book of Shapes by Roseanne Thong

Early Readers: 

Hot Hot Roti for Dada-Ji by Farhana Zia

The Many Colors of Harpreet Singh by Supriya Kelkar

The Name Jar by Yangsook Choi

Too Many Mangos by Tammy Paikai

Middle Grade Readers:

The Great Wall of Lucy Wu by Wendy Wan-Long Shang

More to the Story by Hena Khan

The Mystery of the Masked Medalist by Maia Shibutani, Alex Shibutani

The Serpent’s Secret by Sayantani DasGupta

ADVISORY COUNCIL

Aileen Lee, Founder of Cowboy Ventures

Amy Tan, Author

Anthony Ocampo, Cal Poly Pomona

Catherine Ceniza Choy, Berkeley

Christine Bacareza Balance, Cornell

Fariha Khan, UPenn

Helen Zia, Activist & Author

Jafreen Uddin, Asian American Writers’ Workshop

Jeff Yang, Journalist

Jennifer Ho, University of Colorado Boulder

Josephine Park, UPenn

Linda Trinh Vo, UC Irvine

Pawan Dhingra, Amherst

Phil Yu, Blogger/Podcaster

Russell Jeung, San Francisco State University

Sayantani DasGupta, Columbia University

Shalini Shankar, Northwestern

Shilpa Davè, University of Virginia

Soo Ah Kwon, University of Illinois

Viet Nguyen, Writer

Yen Le Espiritu, UCSD

ABOUT GOLD HOUSE

Gold House is the largest nonprofit collective of Asian cultural leaders dedicated to forging stronger bonds that deliver more authentic and successful lives. Our ventures include membership systems and benefits to fortify relationships among Asians and with other marginalized communities (All of Us Movement); championing authentic Asian representation through media to reshape public opinion (Gold Open and A100 List); and accelerating economic success and commercial representation through Asian founders (Gold Rush). To learn more, visit www.goldhouse.org or follow @GoldHouseCo on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

 

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