ALA Booklist
Nina, Silvia, and Shirin's "now-mythical friendship origin story" began at NYU in their freshman writing workshop. As the only Asian Americans, they initially avoided each other, until a class trip to the New York Public Library led to a coincidental bathroom break that led to a BFF-bonding Koreatown lunch. Upon graduating, they moved into a Greenpoint apartment, and in seeking their first jobs, each chose a career in books: Nina as an editorial assistant at a major publishing house, Silvia with a (very wealthy) one-woman independent press, and Shirin at an academic publisher (although she still has to keep her weekend restaurant hostessing gig). Last-to-be-employed Shirin, meanwhile, befriends their captivating 92-year-old neighbor, who turns out to be a Booker Prize winning pioneer with endlessly exhilarating stories. While Gavino empathically showcases independent APA women in search of fulfillment, she also lovingly celebrates Asian American publishing with clever inclusions: a Kaya Press mug, a Dictee poster, Amy Tan, and so on. Presented in delightful four-part, black-and-white panels, Gavino's memorable characters manage the quotidian, dissect challenges, navigate change, and celebrate triumphs gether.
Publishers Weekly
(Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
With quill-sharp narration and spot-on details, this delightful graphic novel from Gavino (Last Night’s Reading) depicts New York City publishing through the eyes of three Asian American NYU grads who share an apartment. Nina Nakamura, the most career-driven of the group, takes an assistant job at a large house. Silvia Bautista, an aspiring novelist, works for an indie press supported by the publisher’s “seemingly endless trust fund.” Shirin Yap is hired at an academic press, possibly because the editor hoped she’d be able to speak Cantonese with their Hong Kong–based printer (Shirin is Filipina). Besides artistic fulfillment, their goal is to “make that Anthropologie money... non-sale section Anthro money!” Their neighbor, 92-year-old Veronica Vo, turns out to be a Booker Prize winner whose subsequent books about the domestic lives of Asian American women have fallen out-of-print. Nina leads a charge to reissue Veronica’s work—success for Veronica will, of course, mean hope for their own ambitions, while righting one small historical wrong. Gavino peppers her savvy line drawings with price tags (“Edith Wharton leather-bound edition, $279”), and applies actual numbers to her characters’ salaries and calculations. Specificity is the fire that fuels this witty social satire, in which fairness doesn’t always triumph, but friendship does. Agent: Kate McKean, Howard Morhaim Literary Agency (Aug.)