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jayisreading's review against another edition
4.5
I was familiar with Chow's work from her time with NPR's Code Switch, and her wonderful storytelling really shone in this memoir in a way that honored her family, history, and culture. I also appreciated the insight of growing up in Connecticut in an Asian immigrant household, which had its own challenges. (On this note, I am all for more Asian American New Englanders writing about their lived experiences, haha.)
Graphic: Cancer, Child death, Medical content, Grief, and Death of parent
Moderate: Racism
Minor: Suicide
noveltay's review against another edition
4.5
Graphic: Animal death, Cancer, Racism, Grief, and Death of parent
moonbebe722's review
3.0
Graphic: Cancer, Terminal illness, Grief, and Death of parent
Moderate: Child death, Miscarriage, Racism, and Police brutality
nannahnannah's review against another edition
4.5
<i>Seeing Ghosts</i> is a memoir, but it’s also a tribute to Kat Chow’s mother, who died of cancer when the author was in her senior year of high school. It’s a very poignant look at the way grief affects different people, and it shows the--I’m quoting the Goodreads summary here, as it captures it perfectly--”strength of sisterhood and the complicated duty of looking after parents, even after death.”
This is the first memoir I’ve read where an author included actual photos of themself with their family. At first I very much loved the added intimacy, but after a few pictures I kind of felt like it became too personal. I know it was Kat Chow’s decision to share them, but it’s almost like I wanted to look away or stop reading (similar to the way that I don’t like to make eye contact for long in some intimate social situations ... yes I'm autistic).
Immediately, Kat Chow’s style grabbed me. The short chapters were fairly disjointed and made following the story hard sometimes, but her humor and writing kept me glued to the pages late into the night. There’s a dark humor that underlies her style that’s so very appropriate for what she was talking about, and it’s something that, for some reason, touched me because it reminded me of her mother (and her mother’s hilarious and uncomfortable morbid comments). Or, at least, the mother Kat Chow writes about. Or maybe I’m just getting ahead of myself. This is the best memoir I’ve read yet, and it resonated with me a lot. And like the ghosts inside it, the memoir has still stuck with me and haunted my thoughts since I finished it in early October. I expect it will for a good while yet.
I’ll have to keep an eye out for what she writes next!
Graphic: Cancer
Moderate: Suicide
Minor: Rape
caseythereader's review against another edition
4.75
Graphic: Animal death, Cancer, Child death, Death, Medical content, Grief, and Death of parent
Moderate: Racism
odrib's review against another edition
3.5
Graphic: Cancer, Death, Terminal illness, Grief, and Death of parent
Moderate: Police brutality, Medical content, and Injury/Injury detail
Minor: Infertility
caseys_chapters's review against another edition
4.25
Seeing Ghosts is centered around the author’s experience losing her mother to cancer at a young age. She also explores several generations of her family’s history in China, The United States, and Cuba and the complicated family dynamics that shaped her.
In many ways this is a ghost story. She describes the lingering emotions tied to grief, generational trauma, and learning about loved ones after their death. It was such an affecting way to frame her experience.
It took a few chapters to get into the flow because the narrative bounces around in time through short vignettes. But once I was in the groove, I was captivated by Kat Chow’s storytelling!
I loved that the book also included family photos. The writing is vivid, but the photos were a beautiful and intimate addition that made me feel even closer to her story.
Graphic: Cancer and Death of parent
Moderate: Racism
ekmook's review against another edition
3.75
Graphic: Cancer, Child death, Death, Racism, Sexism, Grief, and Death of parent
biblio_jordyn's review against another edition
5.0
“This is what it means to lose someone, understanding how, after all these years, memories shift and shape us. How we cannot exorcise someone as much as we try; we must learn the ways in which we preserve parts of them in ourselves.”
This book was a heartbreaking and raw memoir about grief and loss. The loss of a parent. The loss of culture. The loss of language and connection through it. The loss of family. And by the end, it’s a story about somehow piecing things back together even if it takes years and years.
It’s a story of immigration.
It’s a story of family.
This book tackles race and the divide within races and the discrimination they face.
It speaks on depression and the generational differences.
The idea of success, survival, and poverty. Particularly, how poverty effects peoples ability to go to the doctor and peoples relationship with them and distrust.
It speaks on the idea of the “right” way of immigration, which is constantly a battle in the US.
I loved this memoir. It was heavy, but purposeful and I definitely would recommend it for those who can handle the triggers.
Graphic: Cancer, Child death, Mental illness, Racism, Grief, and Death of parent
aliciaclarereads's review against another edition
5.0
Moderate: Cancer, Racism, Sexism, and Death of parent