My Asian Era
A curated journey through Asian literature
Thoughtful Reviews. Quiet Stories. Literary Depth.
For the past two years, I’ve been reading, reviewing, and steadily building a curated archive of books by Asian authors, mostly translated fiction, contemporary literature, and underrepresented voices that often get missed by mainstream reading lists.
What started as a personal reading habit has evolved into a full platform: a growing collection of spoiler-free reviews, thematic roundups, and quiet reflections meant to help more readers discover the emotional and cultural depth of Asian literature.
You’ll find:
Honest reviews from across Asia: Korean, Japanese, Southeast Asian, South Asian, Chinese, and Asian authors writing from around the world
Mini features for short books and chapbooks
Book club picks with community conversation prompts
Emotional clarity over academic critique
A calm space to discover books that you may have missed otherwise
This is a living archive, part ongoing project, part reflective journal.
I’m in the process of centralizing older reviews and continuing to explore both contemporary releases and classic titles from across the region.
If you're tired of the same dozen titles getting recycled across book feeds, you're in the right place.
Welcome.
P.S. If you're looking to read along, I host a quiet book club through Fable. It's casual, thoughtful, and open to anyone curious about Asian literature.
Search Titles, Authors, Keywords, Themes
The Emissary
A bleak vision of Japan’s collapse where the old live on without end and the young fade before they’ve begun. Yoko Tawada’s slim novel is sad, strange, and a reminder of how political choices shape even the most private lives.
Notes from the Ward by Steffi Tad-y
This isn’t a clean story of recovery. What Steffi Tad-y offers in Notes from the Ward are pieces of a life: ward notes, family memories, and the weight of diaspora. They do not come together into one neat picture, but they hold each other the way survival often does, loosely and urgently, without choice.
Ghost Music
Ghost Music is a novel of loneliness, yearning, and mushrooms. Beautifully written and surreal in parts, it is a story that made me pause, underline, and ask questions instead of finding answers.
Where Are You Really From
Seven powerful stories that unsettle, surprise, and remind us how much our choices matter. From Taiwan to Paris to the US, Elaine Hsieh Chou’s collection bends the ordinary into something uncanny while never losing sight of the human heart.
All the Tomorrows After
Winter Moon is raw and real. Joanne Yi’s All the Tomorrows After is a heart-wrenching YA novel about grief, first love, and complicated family ties. Honest, sharp, and deeply emotional.
Yellowface
When Athena Liu dies, June Hayward steals her manuscript and publishes it as her own. What follows is a sharp, uncomfortable satire about race, authorship, and how publishing decides who gets to tell which stories.
Julia Song Is Undateable
A light, funny rom-com with nods to BTS, meddling ajummas, and plenty of spice . Julia Song Is Undateable is the perfect serotonin spike..
Vanishing World
Sayaka Murata flips family and intimacy inside out. Vanishing World is surreal, absurd, and deeply unsettling, with social commentary that feels uncomfortably close to real life. Spoiler-free thoughts on why it works and who it’s for.
The Fourth Daughter
The number four is unlucky in Taiwan. Iit sounds like the word for death. For Ah-Ma, Liv Kuo’s grandmother, that superstition became a lifelong wound when her husband gave their youngest daughter away without telling her. In The Fourth Daughter, Lyn Liao Butler blends Taiwan’s hidden history, family secrets, and the comfort of food into a story about resilience, memory, and the power of never giving up.
Study of Sorrows
Twenty-nine poets from the Song Dynasty, brought to life in warm, accessible translations. Study of Sorrows makes ancient Chinese poetry feel immediate, intimate, and timeless.
Elegy for Opportunity
This was a sweet and surprisingly moving collection, funny at times, sad at others, and very much a book of the moment. Some of the poems are letters to the Mars rover, reflections on family and love, and confessions about what it means to write through grief and joy.
Patchwork Dolls
Some books hit you with emotion. Others hit you with ideas. Patchwork Dolls does both sharp and without ever flinching. These stories are unsettling not because they’re impossible, but because they feel like the next step from where we are now.
The Morgue Keeper
Set in 1966 China, The Morgue Keeper is not a story of rebellion in the traditional sense… it's a story of survival, of sharing cigarettes and kindness when there's nothing left. I finished it wrecked, and grateful to have read it.
What Hunger
When food can’t satisfy your hunger and rage is more powerful than grief... That’s the space What Hunger lives in. A raw, haunting coming-of-age story about trauma, survival, and the power of finding your voice even if you have to bite first.
Premonition
At first, it feels like a story about a girl with premonitions. But what unfolds is quieter and deeper not about seeing the future, but remembering what you weren’t allowed to know. Premonition is soft, steady, and more emotional than it seems at first glance.
Blowfish
A quiet and deliberate novel that explores grief, suicide, and creative purpose through two intersecting lives, a sculptor and an architect, each reckoning with personal loss and the slow gravity of memory. This is a book that doesn’t offer resolution, but instead asks you to sit in the discomfort. I found it powerful, even when the tone stayed distant.
What a Time to Be Alive
What happens when grief, internet fame, and accidental self-help collide? Jade Chang’s new novel follows Lola Treasure Gold — a woman thrust into the spotlight by a viral video and forced to reckon with what it means to be seen, believed, and followed. Part social satire, part character study, this one isn’t always fast, but it stays messy in the right ways.
