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    I Finally Read the ‘Read with Jenna’ May Book Club Pick, & Guys, It Is Good

    By Jillian Quint,

    6 hours ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2SfWVn_0vYR34zY00

    PureWow editors select every item that appears on this page, and the company may earn compensation through affiliate links within the story. All prices are accurate upon date of publish. You can learn more about the affiliate process here .

    I’d never thought of myself as a Jenna Bush Hager fan. I’m not into the Bushes in general, I don’t watch Today and I guess her brand of everyday-mom-professionalism just felt a little vanilla to me. But then I took a look at her book club, Read with Jenna , and I realized: The woman has good taste.

    Unlike her peers—looking at you Reese’s book club —she doesn’t always pick new titles, and her choices range from thoughtful emotional fiction to taut thrillers to political and social commentaries.

    Case in point: her May 2024 selection, Real Americans by Rachael Khong. I just finished this novel and have nothing but rave reviews.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=19wsSF_0vYR34zY00

    cover: knopf; background: getty images

    The book begins just before the turn of the millennium, when struggling media intern Lily Chen meets a handsome and—it turns out—rich stranger at a work party. The man in question is Matthew, and he’s the heir to a pharmaceutical fortune, with a complicated relationship with his stuffy, waspy family. (There are shades of The Perfect Couple if you’re looking closely.) Despite Lily’s niggling concerns, they get married, and eventually have a son, Nico. The big surprise? Though Nico is technically half Chinese, he looks 100 percent white, the spitting image of his father.

    We then skip ahead to the current day, when Nico—who now goes by Nick—is trying to make sense of his life and where he fits in to his cultural history. I won’t give too much away, but his family situation has changed, and as he navigates the college search process, he comes face-to-face with his legacy.

    A final section of the book jumps even further in time to when Nick seeks out his maternal grandmother, May, who has her own story of American immigration and assimilation in the midst of Maoist China. If all this sounds didactic, it’s not. I was thoroughly gripped by each generation’s story, caught up in the hyperrealistic struggles of love, career and social standing, yet aware of the greater questions Khong is posing. What makes us an American? Is everything determined by our genetic and cultural blueprint?

    Bush Hager describes this book as “shapeshifting,” and maintains, “It’s a story of family and what we carry, what we pass down, secrets, and how they can divide us, and then bring us back together again.” I couldn’t agree more. And Jenna, consider me a fan.

    Nicole Kidman’s New Hit Netflix Series Is Based on a Book You *Won't* Be Able to Put Down

    $25 at Target $21 at Amazon
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