Thursday, January 22, 2026

Listen with me

 

K-Jane by Lydia Kang

As I suspected, there was a lot of second-hand embarrassment in this book. When you have a character who starts out the plot lying to basically everyone, we know things are going to blow up spectacularly. If that had been the entire point of the plot then I would say pass on this one. Instead, Kang is using the situation to have a real conversation about culture and assimilation. As a Korean-American, what are Jane's responsibilities to culture? Should she aspire to be all-American or should she be embracing every aspect of Korean culture? And who defines what it means to be authentically Korean? The book grapples constantly with these issues. I had thought perhaps it would also address appreciation versus fetishization and there were moments that brushed against those topics but it never truly gets into it. Even so, this is more than just a light-hearted romp of a character pretending to be something she's not. On the whole, I enjoyed this book even though it made me squirm at times. Well worth the read.

Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley

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