American Han
A Novel
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- Pre-Order
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- Expected Mar 31, 2026
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- $19.99
Publisher Description
“American Han shook me to my core. Gutting in its quietest moments and heartbreakingly familiar in its loudest conflicts, this book is a gripping portrait of the cost of assimilation into American life."
—Muriel Leung, Lambda award-winning author of How to Fall in Love in a Time of Unnameable Disaster
Growing up in the San Francisco Bay Area in the 1980s, Jane Kim and her brother, Kevin, dutifully embodied the model minority myth as their parents demanded: both stellar tennis players and academically gifted, they worked hard to make their parents proud. Jane went on to law school. Kevin came close to becoming a professional tennis player.
But where they started is nowhere near where they have ended up: Jane has stopped going to her law school classes, and Kevin, now a policeman, has become increasingly distant. Their parents, each on their own path toward the elusive American Dream (their mother hell-bent on having the perfect house and the perfect family, their father obsessed with working his way up from one successful business to the next), don’t want to see the family unraveling. When Kevin goes missing, no one recognizes his absence as the warning sign it is until it erupts, forcing them all to come to terms with their past and present selves in a country that isn’t all it promised it would be.
Both deeply serious and wickedly funny, American Han is a profound story about striving and assimilation, difficult love, and family fidelity. A searing portrait that challenges assumptions about the immigrant experience, Lisa Lee’s debut introduces a powerful new voice on the literary landscape.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A 20-something Korean American woman chafes at her immigrant parents' expectations in this emotive and incisive debut novel. In 2002, third-year law student Jane Kim faces an existential crisis. Growing up in Napa, Calif., where her rage-prone father ran a string of businesses, Jane's mother, a mink-wearing woman obsessed with Korean beauty rituals, subjected her to "unhinged bullying, the kind that made me numb, unable to think straight," causing her to follow a career path she'd never desired for herself. Jane and her brother, Kevin, once excelled at tennis and piano, but when Kevin's grades declined in high school, their father smashed his tennis rackets as punishment. Now a San Jose police officer, Kevin's own anger gets the better of him, and he savagely beats a homeless man, undermining his successful career. When Jane announces that instead of taking the bar exam, she's moving across the country to study Korean American history, the news is too much for her mother, who holds a "grieving party" to mark her departure. Lee's character work is top notch, especially as she shows how each family member struggles with the Korean notion of han, an amalgamation of anger, grief, and regret over one's decisions. It's a remarkable achievement.