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The Asian American Immigrant Experience as Reflected in Children’s Literature

  • Writer: Mark West
    Mark West
  • May 16
  • 3 min read

Three book covers: "Inside Out & Back Again" with a girl under a tree, "A Step from Heaven" showing a girl, and "Dragonwings" featuring a father and son.

As an English professor with a specialty in children’s and young adult literature, I have taken a particular interest in children’s literature that deals with the immigrant experience. Since the Asian and Pacific Islander Heritage Month takes place in May, now is an especially fitting time to focus on children’s books that relate to the Asian American immigrant experience. There are many children’s books about Asian American immigrants, but three of my favorites are Laurence Yep's Dragonwings, An Na's A Step from Heaven, and Thanhha Lai's Inside Out & Back Again. These are all award-winning books that shed light on the experience of Asian children who move to America where they grow up facing prejudice but also opportunity. 


Two figures stand against a sky with dragon clouds and a biplane. Cover text: "Dragonwings" by Laurence Yep. 25th Anniversary Edition.

Laurence Yep’s Dragonwings came out in 1975, and the next year it was named a Newbery Honor Book. The story focuses on Moon Shadow, a boy from the Kwangtung Province in China who moves to San Francisco in 1903 to join his father, who had moved to America some years earlier. Moon Shadow is just eight years old when he takes the voyage across the Pacific Ocean to start his new life in the Land of the Golden Mountain, which is the name he initially uses for America. Moon Shadow and his father share a passion for building and flying kites, and this passion leads them to follow the example of the Wright Brothers and attempt to build an airplane. Yep writes about the prejudice that Chinese Americans faced during this time, but he also shows how Moon Shadow is still able to make friends with a girl who is not part of the Chinese American community. Dragonwings provides an excellent introduction to the experience of Chinese Americans during the early years of the 20th century. 

 

An Na’s A Step from Heaven was published in 2001 and went on to win the Michael L. Printz Award

Young girl with flowing hair amidst floral patterns. Text: "a step from heaven" and "National Book Award Finalist."

for Excellence in Young Adult Literature. The novel opens when four-year-old Young Ju and her parents board a plane in South Korea and fly to Southern California to start a new life in America. Most of the novel focuses on Young Ju’s difficult teenage years. Her father struggles to support his family financially and resents the fact that he is dependent on his daughter to help him communicate with governmental and school officials. An Na’s novel shows how language barriers and cultural conflicts have an impact on family dynamics. Young Ju’s father has a very difficult time making the transition from Korea to America, and he takes his frustration out on his family. Young Fu, however, is more successful than her parents at forging an identity as an Asian American.

 

Silhouette of a girl holding a tree at sunset, with leaves blowing. "Inside Out & Back Again" in elegant text. Award seals on top.

Thanhha Lai's Inside Out & Back Again is a work of historical fiction written in the form of a verse novel. Originally published in 2011, this debut novel went on to win the National Book Award for Young People’s Literature and was named a Newbery Honor Book. The novel is based in part on the author’s childhood experience of fleeing Vietnam in 1975 and eventually settling with her family in Alabama, but the author fictionalizes some of the details related to her family. Hà, the central character, is a ten-year-old girl who speaks no English when she first arrives in Alabama. She is the only Asian girl in her class, and she faces bullying and prejudice on a daily basis, but she also experiences moments of kindness. Their next-door neighbor, Mrs. Washington, supports Hà, and gradually Hà and the other members of this Vietnamese family make a place for themselves in Alabama. 

 

These three novels are rooted in the Asian American immigrant experience. The central characters in these stories come from three different countries with different languages and different cultures, but their experiences in America have much in common. They all face prejudice and cultural conflict, but they all strive to make America their new home. For readers who do not come from an Asian American background, these three novels provide cultural and historical insights. By reading literary works about people whose lives are different from our own, perhaps we, too, can come to a better understanding of how others experience the world, and that is a meaningful step in the process of resisting prejudice.



headshot of Mark I. West

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Mark I. West is a professor of English at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, where he has taught courses on children's and young adult literature since 1984.  He has written or edited twenty-five books, including the forthcoming Once Upon a Toy:  Essays on the Interplay Between Stories and Playthings, which he co-edited with Kathy Merlock Jackson.

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