Reviews

The Good Immigrant: 26 Writers Reflect on America by

aaliya87's review against another edition

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challenging hopeful informative reflective slow-paced

4.0

bookslifeandeverythingnice's review against another edition

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5.0

I won this book for free through Goodreads Giveaways. Thank you to Goodreads, Little, Brown and Compan, and Nikes Shukla for a copy of the book. As always, an honest review from me.

Like:
- References some current political issues surrounding immigration, but keeps the focus mainly on the people
- The cover: the colors are great - bold, beautiful and eye catching

Love:
- Contains essays from many different people - the variety of perspectives, writing styles and stories makes it well rounded
- Different countries and cultures are well represented
- It’s not just another immigrant story, but we really get to know them as people telling their stories. It’s a privilege to read about their lives.
- Wonderful story telling - that absolutely transports me to the setting

Dislike: —

Wish that:
- I connected with all of the essays - to be clear, I connected with many of them, but not all which is to be expected in a book of essays by many authors

Overall, it was a pleasure to read this book. I’m already recommending it to others. Definitely recommend if you’re looking for a great book of essays or to read about immigration stories.

fairee's review against another edition

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4.0

A poignant and heartfelt collection of essays that I was able to relate to as a child of an immigrant, and also learn a lot from as the essays were vast and different. Common threads were family, childhood, and being an outsider, and it was beautiful to witness the huge differences but also similarities in every story. Not all essays were equally captivating, but overall I highly recommend this book to anyone either wanting to learn more about the diverse immigrant experience, or affirm the many things we all feel as immigrants/ people with immigrant families. My favorite essays were “how to write Iranian-American” “swimmer” “how not to be” “on loneliness” “chooey-booey and brown” “shithole nation” “dispatches from the language wars” and “skittles”

lulumt's review against another edition

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challenging reflective slow-paced

3.5

books_coffee_cornwall's review against another edition

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informative slow-paced

3.75

nd2712's review against another edition

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4.0

As with any essay collection, I didn't like every single one, but I could appreciate the message that each author was trying to get across. I had some favourites and some that I've learned brand new things from - I particularly loved the ones written by filmmakers and actors, who talk about their experience in Hollywood coming from a diverse variety of backgrounds that aren't straight and white. I suggest you pair this one with Shukla's collection from UK specific authors for a truly informative and fascinating reading experience.

crolland23's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional funny hopeful informative inspiring reflective sad tense medium-paced

5.0

jo_d's review against another edition

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emotional informative inspiring lighthearted reflective fast-paced

5.0

dorayang's review against another edition

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5.0

Very moving, very relatable. Very important underlying message for all, especially in the modern world.

bites_of_books's review against another edition

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challenging hopeful informative reflective sad medium-paced

4.0

 This collection of essays gave me 26 writers to go and find all their works. Some because the writing is brilliant, others because I just need to know more about their work in general.

The intersection of being an immigrant with racism, classism, bigotry, sexism, etc., is heavily seen in this collection of essays. One isn't just an immigrant and therefore with certain characteristics, there are other things at play at all times. From those who have clear physical attributes that immediately causes them to stand out to those who might have an accent or who might not have the same resources as non-immigrants, these experiences are explored in these essays.

The idea of "the American Dream" is also explored in many of these essays, how that dream might be one that was dreamed by a group of people who had the means to achieve it and, which is unattainable for immigrants, or just not even something that we want but that we must achieve as part of our journey. For myself I felt like as an immigrant there is a path that I had to follow, education, job, house, but it left little room for what I wanted to achieve in life, this collection opened my eyes to the possibilities of what can be. From being in a punk rock band to a film maker or a writer, all these possibilities come from courage and the ability to see beyond that dream.

I'd highly recommend this to all, if anything you're bound to find a writer or two to follow after you're done with their essays.