The Manicurist's Daughter, 9781250835048
Hardcover
A daughter unearths family secrets, trauma, and finds her own strength.

The Manicurist's Daughter

a memoir

$69.46

  • Hardcover

    320 pages

  • Release Date

    8 July 2024

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Summary

The Manicurist’s Daughter: A Memoir of Grief, Resilience, and the Pursuit of Identity

Susan Lieu’s life is a tapestry woven with threads of escape, ambition, and unanswered questions. Her family, refugees of the Vietnam War, sought refuge in California in the 1980s, becoming masters of survival. At the heart of their journey was Susan’s mother – a beautiful and charismatic leader who guided them from poverty to success.

But when Susan was eleven, tragedy struck. Her mother d…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781250835048
ISBN-10:1250835046
Author:Susan Lieu
Publisher:St Martin's Press
Imprint:St Martin's Press
Format:Hardcover
Number of Pages:320
Release Date:8 July 2024
Weight:526g
Dimensions:245mm x 167mm x 31mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

“A stunning, raw, brave memoir that wouldn’t let me go.”―V (formerly Eve Ensler), author of Reckoning and The Vagina Monologues

“With tenacity, wit, and fierce love, Susan Lieu reconstructs the mother she lost - from memory, through detective work, by spirit conjuring…defying all obstacles and naysayers. A high octane roller coaster to healing.”―Thi Bui, author of The Best We Could Do, an American Book Award winner, a National Book Critics Circle finalist, and an Eisner Award finalist

“The quintessential story of an immigrant’s kid―filled to the brim with heartache and hope.”―Gene Luen Yang, author of American Born Chinese, a National Book Award finalist and Printz Award winner

“Devastating yet healing, painful yet humorous, epic yet intimate, The Manicurist’s Daughter made my eyes weep yet my heart sing. Susan Lieu astonishes me with her ability to transform pain, fear and anger into healing, freedom and hope. This book is the pathway to peace, an admirable achievement from one of America’s leading diasporic Vietnamese performance artists.”―Nguyễn Phan Quế Mai, international bestselling author of The Mountains Sing, a Dayton Literary Peace Prize finalist, and Dust Child

“Lieu is a dynamo, spouting humor, profanity and wisdom in the same breath.”–The LA Times (Books for Lunar New Year)

“Lieu’s candor about her mother’s faults (body-shaming chief among them) and righteous anger at the surgeon who killed her set this apart from similar fare. It’s a generous portrait of grief that will touch those who’ve struggled with loss…..a stirring debut.” –Publishers Weekly“An intimate Asian American memoir about family, memory, and grief.”–Kirkus

“Lieu’s resulting memoir is a stunning feat of investigation, introspection, wit and candor; it braids together family history, grief, body image, food, class, race, and resilience for insight that must not be missed.”-ELLE

”[A] well-paced, panoramic memoir… her family story does not represent an irretrievable demise of the American Dream, but its radical, open-ended evolution.” ―NPR.org”[Lieu] penned a beautifully written, poignant, and, at times funny, book about grief, body image and self-awareness – arriving at a place of healing and acceptance of herself and her family.” ―The Seattle Times

About The Author

Susan Lieu

Susan Lieu is a Vietnamese-American author, playwright, and performer who tells stories that refuse to be forgotten. A daughter of nail salon workers, she took her autobiographical solo theatre show 140 LBS: How Beauty Killed My Mother on a 10-city national tour with sold out premieres and accolades from L.A. Times, NPR, and American Theatre. Eight months pregnant, she premiered her sequel OVER 140 LBS as the headliner for ACT Theatre’s SoloFest. Within one year she held 60 performances to over 7,000 people. Her award-winning work has been featured at Bumbershoot, Wing Luke Museum, The Moth Mainstage, On The Boards, The World Economic Forum, RISK!, CAATA ConFest, Viet Film Fest, and she has spoken at more than a dozen universities around the country. She serves as an Artists Up mentor, Artist Trust instructor, “Model Minority Moms” podcaster, and board member for international NGO Asylum Access. As an activist, she worked with Consumer Watchdog to pass a law to raise medical malpractice caps. Susan and her sister co-founded Socola Chocolatier, an artisanal chocolate company based in San Francisco. She is a proud alumnus of Harvard College, Yale School of Management, Coro, Hedgebrook, and Vashon Artist Residency. Susan lives with her husband and son in Seattle where they enjoy mushroom hunting, croissants, and big family gatherings. The Manicurist’s Daughter is her first book.

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