First, the author has an academic background. The depth and incorporation of so many sources were impressive. The references were helpful, especially for those who want to read more! They also helped to support her numerous key points. Like the author, I grew up in SGV and attended a rival high school. I learned a lot from reading about my childhood home through her experience. Clearly, the author had given a lot of thought to how her upbringing impacted her adult life. I thought her intervarsity experience was very interesting. While I was not involved with them in college, they were a large presence on my campus. I did get a bit lost in the middle and felt it was somewhat daunting to wade through so many buzzwords/ academic words. It left me wondering who the target audience is? I guess I was expecting to have action items after reading this, and I feel like I need to do more reading. Overall, I felt like I learned a lot about someone’s experience that is entirely different than my own, and therefore, I am glad I read this one.
- Book Review
- Unassimilable: An Asian Diasporic Manifesto for the Twenty-First Century
- Bianca Mabute-Louie
- May 24, 2025
Unassimilable: An Asian Diasporic Manifesto for the Twenty-First Century
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READ VIA:
Thank you, Macmillan Audio, for the free advanced listening copy.
ABOUT:
When Joy Moore goes missing, Benny Abbot immediately spirals into panic. Joy is his best friend and podcast co-host, and there appears to be a decent strain in their relationship. Benny’s unease is compounded by the fact that Joy’s husband, Xander, is also missing. As the days pass, Benny becomes a subject himself. It is only through Joy’s POV that the truth begins to come to life.
MY THOUGHTS:
This is one heck of a debut. I love that this thriller also had this huge friendship/romance subplot. Genre-bending lovers, this is for you.
The writing is sharp, the pacing near perfect, and the reveals are shocking. Crum easily propels this narrative forward in a way that left me excited every time I picked this book up.
In particular, I enjoyed the feeling of not knowing whom to trust, and Crum did an excellent job of casting doubt in the reader’s mind about what was happening.
The dual timeline- dual POV helped feed my ever present suspense while also giving me enough information to keep me fully engaged!
Plus, the Los Angeles hills vibe was immaculate, which always makes me enjoy a book more!
AUDIO:
If you are an audiobook fan, you need to listen to this book. The production quality is through the roof. Whelan and Hopkins complement each other so well! I wanted this podcast to be real. The snippets we got were so excellent!
SIMILAR BOOKS:
This reminded me of None of This is True, but that might just be because it’s a podcast. This was (thankfully) a little less dark.
SHOULD YOU READ:
This Might Save Your Life will be a hit for fans of thrillers and contemporary fiction alike.
