Thursday, May 26, 2016

Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide by Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn













My Ratings:
Vocabulary:  *****
Ingredients: *****
Satisfaction: *****
Lexile Level: 1200L
Genre:  Non-fiction, Research, based on personal experience
My Opinions: Initially when I received this book from my English teacher my freshman year, I expected this to be an extremely boring, purely stats-filled non fiction book. I mean...after reading Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide on the front cover, I expected it to be full of fluff and to retain a "go feminism" type of vibe throughout the entire book. However, I took the book from her hand simultaneously believing it to be a huge mistake and holding a forced smile - I couldn't deny an offer from my english teacher.

Of course, I was proven wrong because I just reread the book again. I opened the book and it was unlike any other non fiction book I had read. Sure it had its prelude of facts and stats regarding the realm of human trafficking. However, WuDunn and Kristof immediately dive into a series of chapters that are developed based on their own experience. For example, Kristof writes about his experience meeting several human trafficked girls in Asia and Africa. The couple than transitions into personal experiences where they meet families whose wives and daughters suffer from poor hospital conditions and poor medical supervision during child birth in places like Africa. Like this, the two authors go on and on discussing details from their trove of experience in various countries and meeting various women and girls of all ages. Everything they discuss is related to a main issue females face today.

Their accounts provided vivid details. Nothing was sugarcoated. Everything was raw, intense, and had a call for action. That is what I LOVED about this book. The authors were not simply just reporting the problem and waiting for another to write a book about how it could be solved. They take the initiative to complete the circle by providing various solutions for both the victims and the readers. They don't just stop with the facts. They take the next step by analyzing their collected information and providing detailed solutions.

These solutions went hand in hand with the project I was currently working on. I am the Director of our school's UNCHAINED Fashion Show. It is a local non profit that aims to abolish human trafficking. The show seeks to raise awareness and knowledge of the issue so that community members feel empowered to take a stand against traffickers. Suddenly, the reason why my teacher had handed me the book that day became clear.

I am an abolitionist. She was a fellow abolitionist seeking to fuel my mission.

For example, I was truly able to connect with the message in the first ten chapters. These chapters honed in on the physical, mental, and social strain created for girls and women in human trafficking. Instead of just pouring out their personal accounts, the authors dug deeper to make connections between the victims' experiences and physiological and psychological impairments. Towards the end, Kristof and WuDunn provided examples of ways the reader could prevent human trafficking - one being to simply "raise awareness and knowledge for it". Once I read this, my work with UNCHAINED in hosting their fashion show to prevent human trafficking year after year felt validated. I felt complete knowing that this show will definitely impact many lives. 

10/10 Recommend :) Perhaps this is a sign I should start exploring more non fiction options. 

Monday, January 4, 2016

Chinese Cinderella by Adeline Yen Mah

Happy New Year!

2016 is going to be a huge year for me as I finish up second semester of junior year, start my college search, and work on those application this fall! Makes me dizzy just thinking about college!

Where has time gone? 

It just seems like yesterday I started this blog as an 8th grader in 2013. With all the crazy school and extracurricular schedules, I am incredibly lucky to call Bookaroma as my safe haven for me to sit down, relax, and let my mind and fingers guide my thoughts about something I love - reading.

To kick off the New Year, I chose to reread one of my all time favorites: Chinese Cinderella by Adeline Yen Mah.














My Ratings:
Vocabulary:  *****
Ingredients: *****
Satisfaction: *****
Lexile Level: 960 L
Genre:  Non-fiction, Memoirs
My Opinions: This riveting memoir of Adeline Yen Mah's childhood in a wealthy Chinese family during the 1940s provokes both the reader's sympathies and intrigue as Mah tells the story of her painful childhood and her ultimate triumph and courage in the face of despair. Considered bad luck after her mother dies giving birth to her, Mah only falls into more misery after her father remarries (get the Cinderella reference now?). While her stepsiblings are spoilt, Mah and her siblings are left to carry the burden of an antagonistic stepmother. Despite her successes in boarding school, successes in literary competitions, and struggle to maintain her relationship with her beloved grandfather (Ye Ye) and Aunt Baba, nothing is enough to compensate for what Yah truly yearns for: the love and understanding of her family.

The story mostly revolves around her stay at boarding school and the ending the story makes her memoir a lot more realistic. I will give you a clue: it is not about marrying Prince Charming. All I can tell you is that her dreams do come true without the help of a fairy godmother, pumpkin, or a couple of mice.

This is an excellent book for school projects (middle and high school) because of its rich concentration of literary devices and positive morals.

This book reminded me of Bittermelon by Cara Chow (reviewed earlier) because of the background both characters come from, the pressure surrounding their academic lives, their passion for writing, and the struggle to find a place where they truly belonged. As I mentioned in the review for Bittermelon, I felt a strange connection with the character Fei Ting. The same can be said about Adeline and me. It is not necessarily our families that are similar but rather our backgrounds and the atmosphere we are living in. The atmosphere that forces us to strive for the best in anything we pursue; that places a working-spirit on us.

My first 2016 request to you: get this book and read it! 

Hoping 2016 will turn out to be all and more than what you wished for!