Reviews

From Little Tokyo, with Love by Sarah Kuhn

cassiesnextchapter's review

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4.0

Adorable, funny, sweet, and fierce!
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This audiobook was just what I needed! Two people finding their way to their own happy ending, through racial stereotypes and prejudices, family betrayals and insecurities, doubt and anxiety.⠀
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A bit of Cinderella, a lot of heart, a smidge of insta-love, tons of self-discovery and hope and forgiveness. Go give it a listen! Emily Woo Zeller narrates spectacularly!⠀

Thank you to PRH Audio for the gifted audiobook!

rovie_reads's review against another edition

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3.0

actual rating: 3.5

jen286's review against another edition

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4.0

This was a really great read. I loved the representation, both main characters are biracial (Japanese/white and Chinese/Filipino) and some of the discussions of communities and families within this context. It was really wonderful.

When I first started reading I enjoyed how Rika saw herself, even if she was struggling. I...I just really loved Rika right from the start and wanted her to get everything she ever wanted. Wanted her to find her happily ever after even if she didn't believe in that. She is so sweet and kind and wonderful, even if she doesn't see herself that way. Even if she sees her monster side as this bad thing. I loved it and I loved the way she was written. She was so related, especially if you are younger. I loved reading her story.

And Henry? Oh, he was so wonderful too. He is such a sweetheart and he could see Rika right from the beginning. He could see behind the armour she would hide behind and helped her open up and see things in a different way. They were so great together and I just wanted more! I told myself that I was going to stop reading YA as everything I have been trying recently has not been for me, but I am glad I didn't realize this was YA until I started reading it and by then it was too late. I was in the story and couldn't put it down. A really great read, loved watching Rika find herself.

thenextgenlibrarian's review against another edition

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4.0

“It's like no one sees all of me, exactly. Because no one wants to.”

lenorasvaughn's review against another edition

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5.0

this is my new comfort read. i love all the characters especially henry i wish i had him in my life. rika is an amazing strong mc and im so happy i finally read this book. the ending being a true happy ending and parts of rika i saw in myself. the way she has her walls up and the way she gets angry a lot is how i see myself. it felt amazing to read a character like that and i would give up my whole life savings to read this book again for the first time

luckies_universe's review against another edition

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2.0

I wanted to like this book a lot, and for a moment, I was kind of into it. The weather's getting warmer which means it's the perfect time to settle down with a cute summer romance, especially a loosely-based Cinderella story featuring a biracial main character and an array of other BIPOC characters.

I just felt like the message the author wished to portray in the story overpowered the story itself. This book is very clearly about growing up biracial in America, feeling lost and out of place, battling racism within and without your own community, finding friendship and acceptance and facing your fears. On their own, these are important messages, and I love reading about them, but to me it seemed like the author was trying to put in too many core themes instead of sticking to one or two. It made the story far too long and it lacked direction and purpose. The dialogue so obviously pushed the key messages and it made the actual story (a girl trying to find her mother and falling in love) feel like background music.

I've read a lot of books from POC authors like S. K. Ali, Adiba Jaigirdar and Gary Lonesborough which tackle racism and self-acceptance in Young Adult literature in skillful and nuanced ways, giving readers equal parts story and message. I guess I just had high hopes for Little Tokyo and was really excited to read it, I couldn't help but feel a little let down.

I still want to read the author's other book, I Love You So Mochi, as I've heard it's much better compared to Little Tokyo.

rfrockwood's review against another edition

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3.0

Not a favorite, but appreciated the insights into the Asian American experience. Also liked the approach to understanding anger and healthily managing it. Pretty strong language so don't know if I would casually recommend it.

emmaito's review against another edition

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4.0

ugh, this book has my whole heart

witchipedia's review against another edition

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5.0

<3 It took me some time to get into the writing style, but by the end I was ugly crying so hard that I couldn’t care less. This book is a love letter to the mixed community- I recommend it for mixed folks, fellow hafu folks, and anyone wanting to learn more about the mixed experience.

mrs_bookdragon's review against another edition

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4.0

Good and cute romance with some fun mystery thrown in. I liked the humor and all the funny things that happened.