Wang said that multiple times, the moderator mispronounced her name (phonetically spelled on her website, “Chien Joolee Wong”) she was questioned about how she received her education (she and one author both went to Yale, but only she was questioned) and her speech was interrupted by dessert service that attendees said wasn't experienced by the other authors, both of whom are white. The dining room event had more than 100 people in attendance. And like she didn’t matter.”Īt the $60-a-plate luncheon, Wang experienced a series of incidents that would leave her in tears, recalling what other authors of color warned her about when speaking in front of primarily white audiences. “Like that little girl who was called illegal, who was treated like (expletive). “I just felt like I was that little girl again,” Wang, who went on to attend Yale Law School, told the Journal News/lohud. On Wednesday, Barack Obama included it as one of his favorite books of 2021. It's received acclaim from the Times and National Public Radio. Her book, which reached third on the New York Times' nonfiction best-sellers list, recounts moving from China at 7 years old and living undocumented for five years in New York. Racism in Westchester: Yorktown board cuts ties on San Gennaro fest with former GOP leader who made racist slur Abuse in Catholic Church: Victims want closure as Child Victims Act cases drag, blame Archdiocese of New York
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