All You Can Ever Know, by Nicole ChungRead about the other books on the list.
Despite loving—and feeling deeply loved by—her white adoptive parents, Chung always wondered about the Korean strangers who, in a narrative that was repeated to her endlessly growing up, made the ultimate sacrifice to give her a better life. In her overwhelmingly white community in Oregon, she faced prejudice that her adoptive family could neither see nor relate to. It wasn’t until she was pregnant, expecting a child that would be “connected to me in a way no one else had ever been,” that she decided to pry open the black box of her biological family and peer inside. This memoir is at once an account of her search, a nuanced critique of “colorblind” adoptions, and an exploration of what happens when the tidy “legends” that supposedly keep a family together finally break down.
--Marshal Zeringue





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