Review by Booklist Review
Unassimilable tells the story of its author's ever-evolving understanding of her Asian American identity and the frameworks that have shaped how she exists in America. Born and raised in the San Gabriel Valley in Los Angeles, Mabute-Louie witnessed how the Asian ethnoburb allowed immigrants like her grandmother to refuse assimilation into American culture, choosing instead to center their own history and values. Mabute-Louie explores her personal strategies for navigating assimilation and whiteness throughout her education as a scholar, a religious leader, a queer person, and an activist. Perhaps most moving is the author's struggle--ultimately unsuccessful--to hold onto the beloved church that shaped her youth and early adulthood, even as that same church moved deeper into anti-queer policy and resisted its congregants' efforts to hold it accountable. Finally, Mabute-Louie rejects the term "Asian American" and proposes "Asian Diaspora" as a more expansive, inclusive identity label that decenters whiteness and Americanness. While Mabute-Louie's language can sometimes veer overmuch into academic jargon, most of the book is accessibly written and driven by the author's personal journey.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.