American Born Chinese



Written and drawn by Gene Luen Yang, American Born Chinese is a Graphic Novel dealing with the trials and tribulations of Asians attempting to integrate into American culture.

The story begins by following three characters:


 * The first is The Monkey King (Great Sage Equal of Heaven), who is shamed after being kicked out of a celestial dinner party for being a monkey (and not wearing shoes). He becomes obsessed with earning the respect of the Heavenly Hosts as a result.
 * The second is Jin Wang, a second-generation immigrant from China heavily influenced by Chinese culture. After moving from San Francisco to a new city, he awkwardly tries to integrate with the all-white students and staff at school, despite their stereotypical view of Asians.
 * The third is a white American boy named Danny, who is burdened by annual visits of his cousin Chin-Kee, an embodiment of every negative Chinese stereotype ever. Chin-Kee's behavior has forced Danny to change schools in the past to escape association with him.

While each story arc works well on its own and appear to be independent, by the end all three cleverly converge into a climax that affirm the need to embrace one's heritage and Be Yourself.

Released in 2006, it was a finalist for the 2006 National Book Awards (becoming the first graphic novel recognized by the National Book Foundation) and won the 2007 Michael L. Printz Award.

This book provides examples of the following tropes:
""Would your majesty like a banana?""
 * Actual Pacifist: The monk Wong Lai-Tsao, who won't even defend himself when attacked by monsters who want to eat him.
 * Anachronic Order
 * Asian and Nerdy: Wei Chen Sun and Chin-Kee.
 * Atop a Mountain of Corpses: Banged-up Heavenly Hosts, anyway.
 * Attack of the 50 Foot Whatever: The Monkey King's "Giant Form" kung fu skill.
 * Authority Equals Asskicking: How the Monkey King tries to assert himself over the Heavenly Hosts.
 * Battle Aura: Appears when the Monkey King uses his kung fu.
 * Be Yourself: The main Aesop of the book.
 * Better Than It Sounds: Much better.
 * Big Brother Instinct: When Jin starts to date his classmate Amelia Harris, an Anglo friend strongly urges him to stop, saying he wants her to "make good choices."
 * Big Brother Mentor: Jin Wang is this to Wei Chen Sun.
 * Calling Your Attacks: Spoofed when
 * Coming of Age Story
 * Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass:
 * Deal with the Devil: Used metaphorically; Jin is told by an old herbalist that he can be anything he wants if he sells his soul...
 * Did You Just Punch Out Cthulhu?: The Monkey King beats up the Hosts of Heaven on a regular basis.
 * The Ditz: The monkeys of Flower-Fruit-Island are adorably idiotic.

""Your peaches are looking especially plump today!""
 * Double Consciousness: Played with through the graphic novel medium.
 * Double Entendre: Several. In the beginning:

"Timmy: (after Amelia raises her hand) What for, Amelia? You can pet my lizard any time you want.
 * And in Jin's story:

Greg: I don't know, Timmy. You do a pretty good job of that yourself."

"Wei Chen: Why is his hair a broccoli?"
 * Ethnic Scrappy: In-universe: Chin-Kee.
 * Et Tu, Brute?
 * Expository Hairstyle Change: Jin gets a perm to appear more Americanized.

""Hey, I chink it's getting a little nippy out here."
 * The Faceless: Jin and Danny's parents always have their faces partially or completely hidden. Subverted when
 * Forceful Kiss
 * Foreign Queasine: Chin-Kee eats fried cats' gizzards. It's also a veiled Take That against Pat Oliphant (see below).
 * Foreshadowing: The monkey in the biology lab is very fond of Wei-Chen, who can tell at once it's a male and not a female. You could also interpret the Monkey King's urination this way.
 * Fridge Brilliance: The ending is going to feel like utter Mind Screw until this kicks in.
 * Funny Foreigner: Chin-Kee. Jin's friend Wei Chen Sun is also this to a smaller degree.
 * Gratuitous English: When Wei Chen first appears, he's wearing a shirt that reads "Robot Happy".
 * Hijacked by Jesus: Though not really in an unpleasant way. Done deliberately to show the blending of cultures that produces Jin and which he needs to accept.
 * Hurricane of Puns: Occurs in a sickening way when two kids drop a number of Asian ethnic slurs on the playground.

"You're right! I'm getting gook bumps!""


 * I Drank What: One of Chin-Kee's pranks.
 * Insistent Terminology: The Monkey King, Great Sage Equal of Heaven.
 * Intercontinuity Crossover: The story interprets Journey to the West as the Wise Men bearing gifts for the baby Jesus.
 * Ironic Echo: The Monkey King is barred from a celestial party for not wearing shoes (and being a monkey).
 * It Was with You All Along: The Monkey King frees himself from being trapped under a mountain of rock
 * Japanese Ranguage: Chin-Kee talks like this all the time.
 * Jerkass: The ungrateful vagrants treated by Wong Lai-Tsao, who insulted him even as he fed them and tended to them every day.
 * To an extent the Monkey King, or as he likes to be called, the "Great Sage, Equal of Heaven".
 * Several Anglo characters behave in this way toward the Asian-American protagonists. Besides fellow students, just check out the page picture.
 * Journey to the West
 * Meaningful Name: While we don’t see it in the story, the Chinese character that is most likely used for Jin’s name is this 仁, which means “humaneness or kindness”. The character, 仁, is drawn to represent a man connected heaven and earth.
 * Danny
 * Wei-Chen Sun
 * Me's a Crowd: The Monkey King learns the "Hair-Into-Clones" kung fu discipline.
 * Laugh Track: Chin-Kee's appearances are accompanied by a Laugh Track, done as onomatopoeia.
 * Losing Your Head: The Monkey King continues to talk even after being beheaded.
 * The Magnificent: "Say it!" "Great Sage Equal of Heaven!"
 * Me Love You Long Time: Inverted; Jin develops a crush on his schoolmate Amelia, who's Caucasian.
 * The Messiah: The monk Wong Lai-Tsao.
 * Also, y'know, the baby who pops up in one panel, oh, about 18 pages from the end.
 * Nobody Poops: Averted; after flying across all of existence and passing the bounds of reality, the Monkey King relieves himself by urinating on one of the Five Golden Pillars
 * Phenotype Stereotype: Danny is an All-American boy.
 * Physical God: The Monkey King, Great Sage Equal of Heaven. Tze-Yo-Tzuh also puts in an appearance.
 * Punny Name: "Chin-Kee" is a pun on the Chinese slur "chink."
 * The Reveal: Happens three times:
 * Secret Test of Character: Both in the retelling of the Journey to the West and
 * Shape Shifter: The Monkey King learns a kung fu discipline to do this.
 * Shout-Out: To Transformers. At one point, Jin as a kid wants to be one when he grows up, which prompts an old woman to use them to illustrate a point: anyone can change into something they aren't, but at the cost of losing what they are in the first place.
 * Stop Being Stereotypical: Chin-Kee, who is a perpetual source of embarrassment for Danny, and has caused him to switch schools out of embarrassment several times before.
 * Supernatural Martial Arts: The Monkey King acquires numerous abilities through the mastery of various kung fu disciplines.
 * Take That: Danny attends Oliphant High School, a reference to Pat Oliphant for a racist political cartoon he drew in April 2001. See Foreign Queasine, above.
 * Toilet Humor
 * Tomato Surprise: With some shades of Tomato in the Mirror.
 * Two Three Lines No Waiting
 * Unnamed Parent
 * Voluntary Shapeshifting: One of the Monkey King's powers
 * Yawn and Reach
 * What Measure Is a Non-Human?: The Monkey King is barred from a celestial party because he is a monkey (and for not wearing shoes).