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Author Wang, Qian Julie, 1987- author.

Title Beautiful country : a memoir / by Qian Julie Wang.

Edition First edition.
Publication Info. New York : Doubleday, [2021].
©2020
3 holds on first copy returned of 10 copies
Location Call No. Status
 95th Street Adult Biography  BIO WANG    Trace2
 95th Street Adult Biography  BIO WANG    AVAILABLE
 95th Street Adult Biography  BIO WANG    AVAILABLE
 95th Street Adult Biography  BIO WANG    DUE 04-23-24
 Naper Blvd. Adult Biography  BIO WANG    AVAILABLE
 Naper Blvd. Adult Biography  BIO WANG    AVAILABLE
 Naper Blvd. Adult Biography  BIO WANG    AVAILABLE
 Nichols Adult Biography  BIO WANG    AVAILABLE
 Nichols Adult Biography  BIO WANG    AVAILABLE
 Nichols Adult Biography  BIO WANG    AVAILABLE
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Description x, 305 pages ; 25 cm
Summary An incandescent and heartrending memoir about Qian Julie Wang's five years living undocumented after immigrating with her parents from China to New York City in 1994. In Chinese the word for the United States, Mei Guo, translates directly to "beautiful country," but when seven-year-old Qian is plucked from her warm and happy childhood surrounded by extended family in China, she finds a world of crushing fear and poverty instead. Unable to speak English at first, Qian is isolated and disregarded, put into special education classes because she doesn't speak the language and humiliated by teachers and classmates when she struggles to pay attention because of hunger or exhaustion. She encounters racism, and people of other races, for the first time, shocked at where her family fits in comparison to their status as educated elites in China. After school she works shifts alongside her mother in Chinatown sweatshops. There is so much about Qian's new home that doesn't make sense, but the rules of survival are drilled into her head: If you see a policeman, you must run in the other direction. If anyone asks—or even if they don't—you tell them you were born here. Do as you're told or we could be separated forever. Understanding impliclity the toll this has taken on her parents, Qian tries desperately to cheer them up and mediate their increasingly heated arguments, certain that if she is good enough, she can hold the family together. In remarkable, unsentimental prose Wang channels her childhood perspective, illuminating the cruelty and indignity of America's immigration system, while also crafting a narrative of resilience from her family's small moments of joy: their first slice of pizza, "shopping days" when the family would unearth unlikely treasures in Brooklyn's trash, and the necessary escape she found in books at the local library. Searing and unforgettable, this is an essential book about the cost of making a home in a hostile land from an astonishing new talent.
Subject Wang, Qian Julie, 1987- -- Childhood and youth.
Wang, Qian Julie, 1987- -- Family.
Chinese Americans -- New York (State) -- New York -- Biography.
Immigrants -- New York (State) -- New York -- Biography.
Noncitizens -- New York (State) -- New York -- Biography.
Shijiazhuang Shi (China) -- Biography.
Brooklyn (New York, N.Y.) -- Biography.
Illegal immigration -- New York (State) -- New York -- Biography.
ISBN 9780593313008 (pbk.)
9780385547215 (hbk.)
0385547218 (hbk.)
9780385547215 : HRD (hardcover)
0385547218 : HRD (hardcover)
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