Pioneer Girl by Bich Minh Nguyen

Pioneer Girl

by Bich Minh Nguyen

“A powerful and wholly original American saga.” —San Francisco Chronicle

Bich Minh Nguyen’s previous books—the acclaimed memoir Stealing Buddha’s Dinner and the American Book Award–winning novel Short Girls—established her talents as a writer of keen cultural observation. In Pioneer Girl, Nguyen entwines the Asian American experience with the escapist pleasures of literature, in a dazzling mystery about the origins of Laura Ingalls Wilder’s classic Little House on the Prairie.

Lee Lien has long dodged her Vietnamese family’s rigid expectations by immersing herself in books. But now, jobless with a PhD in literature, she is back at home, working in her family’s restaurant under her mother’s hypercritical gaze—until an heirloom from their past sends Lee on a search for clues that may lead back to Wilder herself, transforming strangers’ lives as well as her own.

Reviewed by lovelybookshelf on

4 of 5 stars

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Originally posted on my blog, A Lovely Bookshelf on the Wall:

Lee Lien has just earned her PhD in English, but has no immediate job prospects. Upon returning home, she is forced to face her tenuous family relationships and learn to balance her own aspirations with family responsibilities. As a second-generation Vietnamese-American, this also includes figuring out how to reconcile cultural differences between her and her mother.

When Lee stumbles upon a pin left behind by an American reporter in Saigon during her mother's childhood, she remembers reading about a pin with its exact description in one of the Little House books. Suspecting that the American reporter from her mother's past may have been Rose Wilder Lane, Lee embarks on an academic adventure that proves to be far more of a personal journey than she expected.

Laura Ingalls Wilder and her daughter Rose aren't exactly the focus of Pioneer Girl; rather, they are the context through which Lee faces her own issues. The relationship between Lee and her mother often mirrors that between Rose and Laura. There is an interesting parallel between the lives of pioneers and immigrants as well.

My only problems with the novel were one random, short-lived and out-of-the-blue romantic scene that felt completely out of place, and a nonchalance toward the main character's instances of petty theft. There is a sense of ennui throughout the novel, even through the end, but I think it works. Other than that, I thought the novel had a very enjoyable writing style, a cultural perspective that kept me engaged throughout, and characters with complex relationships and motives. Pioneer Girl is a unique spin on the second-generation immigrant coming-of-age story.

I received a copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for my honest review.

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