Sunday, June 7, 2026
Boring Asian Female
Elizabeth Zhang grew up in South Dakota, the only Asian girl in her class. For years, her identity was built around academic success while she was placed in the “nerd” category. Deeply jealous of how effortlessly the other girls seemed to move through life, Elizabeth worked twice as hard. The Ivy League sat at the top of her ambitious list. At Columbia in New York City, Elizabeth is no longer the only Asian girl, but the competition is fierce, and to make matters worse, everyone seems richer and more connected than she is. Liz has a few good friends and the occasional hookup with a relatively cute guy, but her sights are fixed on one goal: Harvard Law School. After four years of relentless work, she applies with a stellar GPA and an aced LSAT. And then she is rejected. As her life begins to spiral, Liz’s OCD demands a reason — an explanation for this absurd outcome. Her obsession lands on Laura Kim, a beautiful fellow Asian student who was accepted. Soon, she becomes ruthless, obsessive, and unhinged. Boring Asian Female is a razor-sharp dark satire about race, identity, ambition, and the way society reduces people into assumptions. Uncomfortable and a page turner, this reminded me of Yellowface by R.F. Kuang (which I loved) in the way it exposes the dark, twisted rationalizations people use to justify taking what they believe they deserve — by any means necessary. ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)

No comments:
Post a Comment