An Asian American A to Z:
A Children’s Guide to Our History
Haymarket Books 2023

Co-authors Cathy Linh Che and Kyle Lucia Wu take us on a journey through stories of celebration and resistance: the Third World Liberation Front, the Muslim Ban, Japanese American incarceration camps, Padma Lakshmi, Rashida Tlaib, Sunisa Lee, and more. It is a history of struggle, but also one of great triumph, brought to life with colorful and dynamic illustrations by Kavita Ramchandran. Asian American identity formation is expansive yet under-taught, and this book is a necessary intervention that will ground readers in joy, history, and solidarity. Written by the directors of Kundiman—an organization dedicated to nurturing Asian American writers—An Asian American A to Z is a book for children of all backgrounds and a vital resource for tomorrow's organizers.

“This is the book I wish I had when I was growing up. It’s the book I’m glad I have now, one that I can read to my own children. Personal and political, playful and provocative, this rhyming guide brilliantly condenses rich, complicated Asian American histories. It’s an A to Z book that isn’t the last word on Asian American cultures but rather the beginning of many conversations.”
—Viet Thanh Nguyen

“An essential collection for any children’s library—it’s the book I wish I had for my own children when they were young. Informative, engaging and delicious rhymes—Che and Wu are simply enchanting storytellers. This book is foundational and intersectional, providing just the right historical touch to pique kids’ curiosity and encourage further reading for all!”
—Aimee Nezhukumatathil

“In An Asian American A to Z, Che, Wu, and Ramchandran share a beautiful, bright, and inclusive history of Asian America that is sure to inspire and delight readers. Asian Americans have much to be proud of, and much to look forward to.”
—Sarah Park Dahlen


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Win Me Something
Tin House Books 2021

A NPR, Electric Lit, & Entropy Best Book of the Year. |
A November Indie Next Pick

“Wu understands the human heart keenly, and her novel is a subtle but powerful triumph.” NPR

A carefully observed and subtly devastating meditation on the often porous lines between work and real life.” Vogue

“Wu’s finely crafted sentences and crisp imagery render visceral Willa’s inner disquiet.” The New York Times

Win Me Something is a poignant, impressive debut that should herald the rise of a literary force to be reckoned with.” Shondaland

“A dazzling literary debut…I’ve rarely seen a text in the landscape of American letters that speaks so eloquently to the heartbreaking, gorgeous complexity of the Asian American biracial experience.” Soapberry Review

selected press for Win Me Something

Now available in France from Mercure de France as
Une fenêtre sur Tribeca, translated by Juliette Bourdin.

praise for Win Me Something

Win Me Something tenderly and masterfully reveals the fury, hope, and longing that come with trying to be seen in a world that never looks for you.”

—Mira Jacob, author of Good Talk

“Wu’s beautifully observed coming-of-age tale is a poignant and lyrical meditation on navigating the world with a fragmented sense of self.”

—Literary Hub, Most Anticipated Books of 2021

“In Win Me Something, Kyle Lucia Wu examines the biracial experience with razor sharp precision, nuance, and profound feeling. Her prose radiates off the page, with every color, character, and scrap of food animating the world of this story, all of it asking who, and what, is of value in America? I love the gentle candor of Wu’s prose, the sneaky devastation. Her debut is a resonant knockout.”

—T Kira Madden, author of Long Live the Tribe of Fatherless Girls

Win Me Something is an observant, contemplative story about the complex reality of growing up with a mixed identity in two starkly different mixed families. Kyle Lucia Wu deftly weaves back and forth between Willa’s teenaged years and her adult life to explore loneliness, uncertainty, and a singular, persistent question—where do I truly belong?” 

—Crystal Hana Kim, author of If You Leave Me

“[A] compassionate debut…Wu brilliantly lays out the complicated dynamics of love, belonging, and care that exist within all relationships.”

Publishers Weekly

“Taut, engrossing, and masterfully observed, Win Me Something announces a powerful and luminescent new literary voice in Kyle Lucia Wu.” 

—Alexandra Kleeman, author of You Too Can Have a Body Like Mine

“Kyle Lucia Wu’s Win Me Something is groundbreaking in its exploration of blended families and a biracial Asian American consciousness. In subtle but strikingly observed scenes that depict race, class, and lives of having and not having, she explores the secret want that we all have: to belong to something, somewhere. Here we find Willa, a biracial Chinese American narrator seeking to understand where she belongs in the family of things. Here is a prose writer who relishes in the poetry of language. Under Wu’s deft hand, each sentence unfolds like a miracle.” 

—Cathy Linh Che, author of Split

“Like a latter-day Willa Cather, after whom her protagonist is named, Kyle Lucia Wu has written a beautiful novel about a fiercely American young woman whose Americanness is constantly questioned by those around her. This is a sad, funny, and tender coming-of-age story about what family and belonging means for someone who is realizing that she is constantly watched but not truly seen.”

—David Burr Gerrard, author of The Epiphany Machine

“[A] quietly impressive coming-into-adulthood novel…Expect subtle surprises as Willa’s relationships evolve in a satisfying accumulation of carefully drawn small moments that build toward her understanding, even acceptance, of both an imperfect world and herself.”

–Kirkus Reviews, Starred Review