Campbell Hall

Ahmanson Library

Diversity Resources

Asian Fiction Bibliography

F Hom

Watanabe, Sylvia. Home to stay : Asian American women's fiction. 1st ed. Greenfield Center, NY: Greenfield Review Press, [1990].

398.26 Bir

Birdseye, Tom and Chen, Ju-Hong. A song of stars : an Asian legend. 1st ed. New York: Holiday House, [1990].

Although banished to opposite sides of the Milky Way, the princess weaver and the herdsman reunite each year on the seventh day of the seventh month.

F Cre

Crew, Linda. Children of the river. New York: Delacorte Press, [1989].

Having fled Cambodia four years earlier to escape the Khmer Rouge army, seventeen-year-old Sundara is torn between remaining faithful to her own people and enjoying life in her Oregon high school as a "regular" American.

398.2 Fol

Folk stories of the Hmong : peoples of Laos, Thailand, and Vietnam. Englewood, Colo: Libraries Unlimited, [1991].

F Bro

Browder, Catherine. The clay that breathes. Minneapolis, Minn: Milkweed Editions, [1991].

F Oki

Okimoto, Jean Davies. Molly by any other name. New York: Scholastic, [1990].

A teenage Asian girl who has been adopted by non-Asian parents decides to find out who her biological parents are.

F Gro

Hong, Maria. Growing up Asian American : an anthology. 1st ed. New York: W. Morrow, [1993].

398.21 Cob

Coburn, Jewell Reinhart and O'Brien, Anne Sibley. Jouanah, the Hmong Cinderella. 1st ed. Arcadia, Calif: Shen's Books, [1996].

Despite a cruel stepmother's schemes, Jouanah, a young Hmong girl, finds true love and happiness with the aid of her dead mother's spirit and a pair of special sandals.

J Tid

Tidd, Louise Vitellaro and Handelman, Dorothy. Lost and found. Brookfield, Conn: Millbrook Press, [1998].

Nate's search for his missing sneaker leads him to many other things he has lost and is delighted to find again.

398.2 Spa

Spagnoli, Cathy. Asian tales and tellers. Little Rock, Ark: August House Publishers, [1998].

Ahmanson Library

August 2001