Yellowface - [9/10]

It’s super cliché, but this book is like watching a car crash. I love the modern storytelling, and I found myself relating to a lot of the feelings evoked and ideas when talking about social media and online habits, something I haven’t really seen in a book before to be honest. This book did a great job of playing with my emotions, in the sense that I do like the protagonist, is she a victim? Should I feel bad for her? We read this for my book club, and I think it’s a perfect book club book because there’s so many nuances and perspectives and opinions that can arise from this. In the humblest way it is quite Shakespearean, in the sense of such strong textual integrity. I’d like to think that if I was in her shoes/situation, I wouldn’t do what she did, but a lot of the self-talk and justification lowkey had me convinced at some points. I want to point out I love the irony of social justice warriors and ‘diverse’ people getting mad at her for being white, when they have lived in the US their whole live and don’t speak their native language.

Author: Rebecca F Kuang

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