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Literary Nonfiction. Asian & Asian American Studies. Middle Eastern Studies. Women's Studies. Angie Chuang takes on an assignment to find the human face of the country we're about to bomb weeks after the 2001 terrorist attacks. Her five-year journey into the lives of the Shirzai family transports her far beyond journalism. She travels to their homeland Afghanistan, and becomes intimately involved with the family's story of loss and triumph over war. As she is drawn ever deeper into the Shirzais's lives, Chuang confronts unknown territory closer to her own home. Her own immigrant family from Taiwan is falling apart. Mental illness, divorce, and deeply rooted cultural taboos have shattered her own family's American Dream. Ultimately, she finds the two families are more similar than she had imagined. It is in journeying far away from her own home and family that she is drawn back to discover her own roots--and to confront the hard truths and broken places that lie at the heart of so many stories of migration and intergenerational struggle.
Novel about the decline of Detroit's famed Paradise Valley entertainment district, which experienced an artistic and economic Golden Age from the 1920s to mid-1960s. Headliners included The Four Tops, Jackie Wilson and Della Reese.From the back cover: Detroit, 1956-Cars were rolling off the assembly line, jobs were plentiful, and some great music was being created and performed in a district called Paradise Valley. The Valley's main artery, Hastings Street, was the center of it all. Paradise Valley was an exciting collage of culture-jazz and blues, vice and illegal numbers running-a mecca for after-hours establishments where blues greats like John Lee Hooker and jazz giants like Dizzy Gillespie often played until well into the morning hours. Its businesses were mainly black-owned and everyone seemed to look out for one another. However, all that changed when "urban renewal" caused Paradise Valley to recreate itself and to relocate in an age of racial segregation. When The Swan Sings On Hastings is a journey through the underbelly of Paradise Valley, its circle of musicians, numbers runners, hustlers, business owners and the everyday inhabitants struggling to deal with the loss of their neighborhood.
Poetry collection by E. Ethelbert Miller, writer, literary activist, and editor of Poet Lore. Miller is a two-time Fulbright Senior Specialist Program Fellow and the founder of the Humanities Council of Washington, D.C.
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